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Family participation to enhance care and tackle health worker shortages in resource-limited hospitals : A systematic review. / Determeijer, Jim J.; Leopold, Stije J.; Spijker, René et al.

In: Journal of global health, Vol. 13, 04005, 20.01.2023, p. 4005.

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@article{6f6658e5c39a4df09fa83e2f3da8b772,
title = "Family participation to enhance care and tackle health worker shortages in resource-limited hospitals: A systematic review",
abstract = "Background A growing global shortage of health workers is limiting access to health care, especially in resource-limited countries. Family participation in hospital care could enhance care while tackling health worker shortages. With the same resources, it might deliver additional and more personalised care. This review assessed the effect and safety of family participation interventions in the care of hospitalised adults in resource-limited settings and, ultimately, if it is a viable strategy to tackle health worker shortages. Methods For this systematic review, Medline, Embase, CINAHL and the Global Health Library were searched from inception till April 7, 2022. Clinical studies were included if they described a family participation intervention for hospitalised adults, were performed in a low or middle-income country and reported on a patient-related outcome. Data were collected on patient, family, staff and health service-related outcomes. Risk of bias was assessed with the ROB2 and ROBINS-I tool. Results From 4444 studies, six were included for narrative synthesis, with a total of 1794 participants. Four studies were performed in Asia and two in Africa; all were published between 2017 and 2022. In-hospital family participation interventions aimed at medication administration and adherence, delirium prevention, and palliative cancer care were successful in significantly improving patient outcomes. Involving family in post-stroke rehabilitation interventions showed no significant effect on mortality and long-term disability. Few data were reported on participating family members{\textquoteright} outcomes or hospital staffing issues. None of the included studies showed harm from family participation. Conclusions The limited data suggest that family participation can be effective and safe in specific contexts. However, more research is needed to determine the effect of family participation and justify further implementation. Family participation research for enhancing care while tackling health worker shortages should be a collaborative priority of researchers, health care professionals, funding agencies and policymakers. Registration PROSPERO registration No.",
author = "Determeijer, {Jim J.} and Leopold, {Stije J.} and Ren{\'e} Spijker and Charles Agyemang and {van Vugt}, Mich?le",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Author(s)",
year = "2023",
month = jan,
day = "20",
doi = "10.7189/13.04005",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "4005",
journal = "Journal of global health",
issn = "2047-2978",
publisher = "Edinburgh University Global Health Society",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Family participation to enhance care and tackle health worker shortages in resource-limited hospitals

T2 - A systematic review

AU - Determeijer, Jim J.

AU - Leopold, Stije J.

AU - Spijker, René

AU - Agyemang, Charles

AU - van Vugt, Mich?le

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s)

PY - 2023/1/20

Y1 - 2023/1/20

N2 - Background A growing global shortage of health workers is limiting access to health care, especially in resource-limited countries. Family participation in hospital care could enhance care while tackling health worker shortages. With the same resources, it might deliver additional and more personalised care. This review assessed the effect and safety of family participation interventions in the care of hospitalised adults in resource-limited settings and, ultimately, if it is a viable strategy to tackle health worker shortages. Methods For this systematic review, Medline, Embase, CINAHL and the Global Health Library were searched from inception till April 7, 2022. Clinical studies were included if they described a family participation intervention for hospitalised adults, were performed in a low or middle-income country and reported on a patient-related outcome. Data were collected on patient, family, staff and health service-related outcomes. Risk of bias was assessed with the ROB2 and ROBINS-I tool. Results From 4444 studies, six were included for narrative synthesis, with a total of 1794 participants. Four studies were performed in Asia and two in Africa; all were published between 2017 and 2022. In-hospital family participation interventions aimed at medication administration and adherence, delirium prevention, and palliative cancer care were successful in significantly improving patient outcomes. Involving family in post-stroke rehabilitation interventions showed no significant effect on mortality and long-term disability. Few data were reported on participating family members’ outcomes or hospital staffing issues. None of the included studies showed harm from family participation. Conclusions The limited data suggest that family participation can be effective and safe in specific contexts. However, more research is needed to determine the effect of family participation and justify further implementation. Family participation research for enhancing care while tackling health worker shortages should be a collaborative priority of researchers, health care professionals, funding agencies and policymakers. Registration PROSPERO registration No.

AB - Background A growing global shortage of health workers is limiting access to health care, especially in resource-limited countries. Family participation in hospital care could enhance care while tackling health worker shortages. With the same resources, it might deliver additional and more personalised care. This review assessed the effect and safety of family participation interventions in the care of hospitalised adults in resource-limited settings and, ultimately, if it is a viable strategy to tackle health worker shortages. Methods For this systematic review, Medline, Embase, CINAHL and the Global Health Library were searched from inception till April 7, 2022. Clinical studies were included if they described a family participation intervention for hospitalised adults, were performed in a low or middle-income country and reported on a patient-related outcome. Data were collected on patient, family, staff and health service-related outcomes. Risk of bias was assessed with the ROB2 and ROBINS-I tool. Results From 4444 studies, six were included for narrative synthesis, with a total of 1794 participants. Four studies were performed in Asia and two in Africa; all were published between 2017 and 2022. In-hospital family participation interventions aimed at medication administration and adherence, delirium prevention, and palliative cancer care were successful in significantly improving patient outcomes. Involving family in post-stroke rehabilitation interventions showed no significant effect on mortality and long-term disability. Few data were reported on participating family members’ outcomes or hospital staffing issues. None of the included studies showed harm from family participation. Conclusions The limited data suggest that family participation can be effective and safe in specific contexts. However, more research is needed to determine the effect of family participation and justify further implementation. Family participation research for enhancing care while tackling health worker shortages should be a collaborative priority of researchers, health care professionals, funding agencies and policymakers. Registration PROSPERO registration No.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85146485769&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.7189/13.04005

DO - 10.7189/13.04005

M3 - Article

C2 - 36655879

VL - 13

SP - 4005

JO - Journal of global health

JF - Journal of global health

SN - 2047-2978

M1 - 04005

ER -

ID: 31711765