3.8 Article

Tailoring and Evaluating an Intervention to Support Self-management After Stroke: Protocol for a Multi-case, Mixed Methods Comparison Study

Journal

JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/37672

Keywords

self-management; self-management support; self-efficacy; stroke rehabilitation; home rehabilitation; person-centered care

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council for Health, Work Life and Welfare [2019-00753, 2020-01236]
  2. Vinnova [2019-00753, 2020-01236] Funding Source: Vinnova
  3. Swedish Research Council [2020-01236] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council
  4. Forte [2020-01236, 2019-00753] Funding Source: Forte

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Self-management programs are valuable for supporting people with long-term conditions. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of Bridges Self-Management in supporting stroke patients in Sweden.
Background: Self-management programs are recognized as a valuable approach to supporting people with long-term conditions, such as stroke, in managing their daily lives. Bridges Self-Management (Bridges) focuses on how practitioners interact and support patients' confidence, skills, and knowledge, and it is an example of a complex intervention. Bridges has been developed and used across multiple health care pathways in the United Kingdom and is theoretically informed by social cognition theory and self-efficacy principles. Evidence shows that self-management programs based on the construct of self-efficacy can be effective. There is still much to learn about how health care services or pathways should implement support for self-management in a sustainable way and whether this implementation process is different depending on the context or culture of the team or service provided. Objective: The aim of this study is to tailor and evaluate an intervention (Bridges) to support self-management after stroke in a Swedish context. Methods: We will use a pretest-posttest design with a case study approach to evaluate the feasibility and implementation of self-management support in two stroke settings. This project includes a complex intervention and depends on the actions of individuals, different contexts, and the adaptation of behavior over time. A mixed methods approach was chosen to understand both outcomes and mechanisms of impact. Data collection will comprise outcome measurements and assessment tools as well as qualitative interviews. Data will be collected concurrently and integrated into a mixed methods design. Results: Recruitment and data collection for the first site of the project ran from September 1, 2021, to January 17, 2022. The intervention at the first site was conducted from November 1, 2021, to March 5, 2022. The evaluation will start after the implementation phase. The second site has been recruited, and the baseline data collection will start in spring 2022. The intervention will start in early autumn 2022. Data collection will be completed by the end of 2022. Conclusions: This study represents a unique, highly relevant, and innovative opportunity to maximize knowledge and minimize practice gaps in rehabilitation stroke care. The study will produce robust data on the intervention and in-depth data on the contextual factors and mechanisms related to the feasibility of the intervention and for whom it is feasible. Bridges has been used in the United Kingdom for more than 10 years, and this study will explore its contextualization and implementation within a Swedish stroke environment. The evaluation will study results at the patient, staff, and organizational levels and provide recommendations for the adoption and refinement of future efforts to support self-management.

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