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Talking the same language on patient empowerment: Development and content validation of a taxonomy of self‐management interventions for chronic conditions

Authors :
Carola Orrego
Marta Ballester
Monique Heymans
Estela Camus
Oliver Groene
Ena Niño de Guzman
Hector Pardo‐Hernandez
Rosa Sunol
COMPAR‐EU Group
Source :
Health Expectations, Vol 24, Iss 5, Pp 1626-1638 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract Context The literature on self‐management interventions (SMIs) is growing exponentially, but it is characterized by heterogeneous reporting that limits comparability across studies and interventions. Building an SMI taxonomy is the first step towards creating a common language for stakeholders to drive research in this area and promote patient self‐management and empowerment. Objective To develop and validate the content of a comprehensive taxonomy of SMIs for long‐term conditions that will help identify key characteristics and facilitate design, reporting and comparisons of SMIs. Methods We employed a mixed‐methods approach incorporating a literature review, an iterative consultation process and mapping of key domains, concepts and elements to develop an initial SMI taxonomy that was subsequently reviewed in a two‐round online Delphi survey with a purposive sample of international experts. Results The final SMI taxonomy has 132 components classified into four domains: intervention characteristics, expected patient/caregiver self‐management behaviours, outcomes for measuring SMIs and target population characteristics. The two‐round Delphi exercise involving 27 international experts demonstrated overall high agreement with the proposed items, with a mean score (on a scale of 1‐9) per component of 8.0 (range 6.1‐8.8) in round 1 and 8.1 (range 7.0‐8.9) in round 2. Conclusions The SMI taxonomy contributes to building a common framework for the patient self‐management field and can help implement and improve patient empowerment and facilitate comparative effectiveness research of SMIs. Patient or public contribution. Patients’ representatives contributed as experts in the Delphi process and as partners of the consortium.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13697625 and 13696513
Volume :
24
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Health Expectations
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6ab2792950b448ab7c6647656f528a6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.13303