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The Cardiac Care Bridge randomized trial in high-risk older cardiac patients: A mixed-methods process evaluation

Authors :
Ron J.G. Peters
Wilma Scholte op Reimer
Lotte Verweij
Michel S. Terbraak
Corine H.M. Latour
Patricia Jepma
Bianca M. Buurman
Denise F. Spoon
Elderly care medicine
APH - Aging & Later Life
University of Zurich
Verweij, Lotte
Faculteit Gezondheid
Lectoraat Critical Care
Lectoraat Acute Ouderenzorg
Graduate School
Nursing
ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes
APH - Quality of Care
Amsterdam Movement Sciences
Other Research
Cardiology
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
Geriatrics
Source :
Journal of Advanced Nursing, 77(5), 2498-2510. Wiley-Blackwell, Journal of Advanced Nursing, Journal of Advanced Nursing, 77(5), 2498-2510. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Journal of advanced nursing, 77(5), 2498-2510. Wiley-Blackwell
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

AimTo evaluate healthcare professionals' performance and treatment fidelity in the Cardiac Care Bridge (CCB) nurse‐coordinated transitional care intervention in older cardiac patients to understand and interpret the study results.DesignA mixed‐methods process evaluation based on the Medical Research Council Process Evaluation framework.MethodsQuantitative data on intervention key elements were collected from 153 logbooks of all intervention patients. Qualitative data were collected using semi‐structured interviews with 19 CCB professionals (cardiac nurses, community nurses and primary care physical therapists), from June 2017 until October 2018. Qualitative data‐analysis is based on thematic analysis and integrated with quantitative key element outcomes. The analysis was blinded to trial outcomes. Fidelity was defined as the level of intervention adherence.ResultsThe overall intervention fidelity was 67%, ranging from severely low fidelity in the consultation of in‐hospital geriatric teams (17%) to maximum fidelity in the comprehensive geriatric assessment (100%). Main themes of influence in the intervention performance that emerged from the interviews are interdisciplinary collaboration, organizational preconditions, confidence in the programme, time management and patient characteristics. In addition to practical issues, the patient's frailty status and limited motivation were barriers to the intervention.ConclusionAlthough involved healthcare professionals expressed their confidence in the intervention, the fidelity rate was suboptimal. This could have influenced the non‐significant effect of the CCB intervention on the primary composite outcome of readmission and mortality 6 months after randomization. Feasibility of intervention key elements should be reconsidered in relation to experienced barriers and the population.ImpactIn addition to insight in effectiveness, insight in intervention fidelity and performance is necessary to understand the mechanism of impact. This study demonstrates that the suboptimal fidelity was subject to a complex interplay of organizational, professionals' and patients' issues. The results support intervention redesign and inform future development of transitional care interventions in older cardiac patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03092402
Volume :
77
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Advanced Nursing
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....858c6275905070ee0a1bc16d0c516e7e