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Interventions delivered by primary or community healthcare professionals to support people living at home with dementia with activities of daily living: a systematic review and narrative synthesis

Interventions delivered by primary or community healthcare professionals to support people living at home with dementia with activities of daily living: a systematic review and narrative synthesis
Interventions delivered by primary or community healthcare professionals to support people living at home with dementia with activities of daily living: a systematic review and narrative synthesis
Background: most people living with dementia live in their own home supported by family carers. One of the most challenging problems they face is managing toilet-use and continence. Carers have repeatedly asked for better advice from healthcare professionals. The purpose of this systematic review was to inform the development of an intervention to support healthcare professionals to provide existing continence management advice to the carers of people living at home with dementia. It aimed to identify and synthesise lessons from the development and evaluation of interventions, involving primary or community healthcare professionals, to support the provision of management advice aimed at supporting people living at home with dementia and their carers with activities of daily living. Due to a lack of relevant continence or toilet-use interventions, this included, but was not limited to, toileting or continence care.

Methods: literature (February 2009-November 2022) was searched using five databases: MEDLINE (Ovid); PsycINFO (Ovid); EMBASE (Ovid); Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) (EBSCO); and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL). Empirical studies using a variety of methodologies were included and thus the quality of papers appraised using the Mixed-Methods Appraisal Tool. No studies were excluded based on quality. A narrative synthesis was undertaken.

Results: twelve articles reporting on 10 interventions were included. Most comprised the provision of online resources only, although some combined these with online or face-to-face contact with healthcare professionals. A variety of methodologies was utilised including randomised controlled trials. The quality of included studies was variable. Six main themes were identified: mode of delivery; targeted and tailored resources; content, design and navigation; credibility; user involvement in the development and evaluation of information resources; and role of professionals and organisations.

Conclusions: despite the urgent need to better support people living at home with dementia and their carers, this review highlights the paucity of studies reporting on interventions delivered within primary and community healthcare contexts to provide management advice aimed at supporting this population with activities of daily living. This review has identified important considerations that will potentially aid the development, delivery and evaluation of such interventions.
Behavioural interventions, Community care, Continence, Family carers, Healthcare professionals, Non-pharmacological interventions, People living with dementia, Primary care, Systematic review
1471-2318
Chester, Helen
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Bradbury, Barbara
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Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Morrison, Leanne
920a4eda-0f9d-4bd9-842d-6873b1afafef
Fader, Mandy
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277
Ward, Jane
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Manthorpe, Jill
202eae30-f95b-46f2-9c65-b6a86b71263b
Murphy, Catherine
b7f2dd56-3a8a-412a-9f6a-bf468ce7f749
Chester, Helen
ee8a740c-c993-4357-84ad-db21d9943d9d
Bradbury, Barbara
100cce6d-9c99-4a93-9b2c-23b2ec5274a4
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Morrison, Leanne
920a4eda-0f9d-4bd9-842d-6873b1afafef
Fader, Mandy
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277
Ward, Jane
9441f950-83dc-4ced-b51f-828ecef649fb
Manthorpe, Jill
202eae30-f95b-46f2-9c65-b6a86b71263b
Murphy, Catherine
b7f2dd56-3a8a-412a-9f6a-bf468ce7f749

Chester, Helen, Bradbury, Barbara, Santer, Miriam, Morrison, Leanne, Fader, Mandy, Ward, Jane, Manthorpe, Jill and Murphy, Catherine (2024) Interventions delivered by primary or community healthcare professionals to support people living at home with dementia with activities of daily living: a systematic review and narrative synthesis. BMC Geriatrics, 24 (1), [860]. (doi:10.1186/s12877-024-05465-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: most people living with dementia live in their own home supported by family carers. One of the most challenging problems they face is managing toilet-use and continence. Carers have repeatedly asked for better advice from healthcare professionals. The purpose of this systematic review was to inform the development of an intervention to support healthcare professionals to provide existing continence management advice to the carers of people living at home with dementia. It aimed to identify and synthesise lessons from the development and evaluation of interventions, involving primary or community healthcare professionals, to support the provision of management advice aimed at supporting people living at home with dementia and their carers with activities of daily living. Due to a lack of relevant continence or toilet-use interventions, this included, but was not limited to, toileting or continence care.

Methods: literature (February 2009-November 2022) was searched using five databases: MEDLINE (Ovid); PsycINFO (Ovid); EMBASE (Ovid); Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) (EBSCO); and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL). Empirical studies using a variety of methodologies were included and thus the quality of papers appraised using the Mixed-Methods Appraisal Tool. No studies were excluded based on quality. A narrative synthesis was undertaken.

Results: twelve articles reporting on 10 interventions were included. Most comprised the provision of online resources only, although some combined these with online or face-to-face contact with healthcare professionals. A variety of methodologies was utilised including randomised controlled trials. The quality of included studies was variable. Six main themes were identified: mode of delivery; targeted and tailored resources; content, design and navigation; credibility; user involvement in the development and evaluation of information resources; and role of professionals and organisations.

Conclusions: despite the urgent need to better support people living at home with dementia and their carers, this review highlights the paucity of studies reporting on interventions delivered within primary and community healthcare contexts to provide management advice aimed at supporting this population with activities of daily living. This review has identified important considerations that will potentially aid the development, delivery and evaluation of such interventions.

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s12877-024-05465-5 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 October 2024
Published date: 23 October 2024
Keywords: Behavioural interventions, Community care, Continence, Family carers, Healthcare professionals, Non-pharmacological interventions, People living with dementia, Primary care, Systematic review

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495742
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495742
ISSN: 1471-2318
PURE UUID: a5f8c986-4135-4ef4-aaad-21e196f0d68d
ORCID for Barbara Bradbury: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6732-3168
ORCID for Miriam Santer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7264-5260
ORCID for Leanne Morrison: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9961-551X
ORCID for Catherine Murphy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1244-5106

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Date deposited: 21 Nov 2024 17:39
Last modified: 23 Nov 2024 03:06

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Contributors

Author: Helen Chester
Author: Barbara Bradbury ORCID iD
Author: Miriam Santer ORCID iD
Author: Leanne Morrison ORCID iD
Author: Mandy Fader
Author: Jane Ward
Author: Jill Manthorpe

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