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I'm Co-development of a Post-Acute Care Intervention for Frailty using Information and Communication technology (PACIFIC): A development process protocol

  • Lauren E. Griffith
  • , Luciana Macedo
  • , Cynthia Lokker
  • , Anthea Innes
  • , Darryl Leong
  • , Marla Beauchamp
  • , Jackie Bosch
  • , Steven R. Bray
  • , Louise Lafortune
  • , Jinhui Ma
  • , Maura Marcucci
  • , Alexandra Papaioannou
  • , Henry Yu Hin Siu
  • , Elizabeth Alvarez
  • , Laura N. Anderson
  • , Carol Bassim
  • , Andrew P. Costa
  • , Jacob Crawshaw
  • , Jasdeep Dhillon
  • , Constance Dupuis
  • Kathryn Fisher, Rebecca Ganann, Milena Head, Ayse Kuspinar, Justin Lee, Karen Mosleh, Rachel Roy, Jean Eric Tarride, Parminder Raina

Résultats de recherche: ArticleRevue par des pairs

Résumé

Introduction Hospitalisation is one of the most stressful life events for older adults, particularly for those who are pre-frail or frail. Multi-component community-based interventions have the potential to address the complex needs of older adults post-acute care admission. While some available interventions have been developed with end-user engagement, fully involving older people who are pre-frail or frail in the design of interventions has been less common. Multi-component community-based interventions that address the needs of older adults and their care partners with potential implementation barriers informed by healthcare providers, community partners and health system decision makers are needed. This protocol paper describes the planned process of co-designing for older patients discharged into the community, a Post-Acute Care Intervention for Frailty using Information and Communication technology. Methods and analysis The development of a complex multi-component frailty intervention which meets older people's needs involves several concurrent tasks and methodologies, each informed by co-design and conducted with consideration to eventual implementation. These tasks include: (1) establishing a Research Advisory Board, (2) assessing the feasibility and validity of using hospital administrative data to identify frail or pre-frail older adults and their needs, (3) conducting a needs assessment of patients returning to the community, (4) mapping community assets to identify existing programmes and services to help tailor the intervention, (5) co-designing a multicomponent frailty intervention, (6) selecting study outcome measures and (7) selecting and tailoring a digital health patient portal to support intervention delivery, data capture and communication. Ethics and dissemination Each task requiring ethics approval will be submitted to the Hamilton Integrated Research Ethics Board at McMaster University. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journal articles, conferences and networks of relevant knowledge users who have the capacity to promote dissemination of the results. A toolkit will be developed to help researchers and healthcare providers replicate the methodology for other populations.

langue originaleEnglish
Numéro d'articlee096691
journalBMJ open
Volume15
Numéro de publication8
Les DOIs
étatPublished - 16 août 2025

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