Development of a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated SELf-MAnagement (INSELMA) intervention for patients with inflammatory arthritis

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Development of a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated SELf-MAnagement (INSELMA) intervention for patients with inflammatory arthritis. / Primdahl, Jette; Bremander, Ann; Hendricks, Oliver; Østergaard, Mikkel; Latocha, Kristine Marie; Andersen, Lena; Jensen, Kim Vilbaek; Esbensen, Bente Appel.

In: BMC Health Services Research, Vol. 24, No. 1, 87, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Primdahl, J, Bremander, A, Hendricks, O, Østergaard, M, Latocha, KM, Andersen, L, Jensen, KV & Esbensen, BA 2024, 'Development of a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated SELf-MAnagement (INSELMA) intervention for patients with inflammatory arthritis', BMC Health Services Research, vol. 24, no. 1, 87. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-10463-1

APA

Primdahl, J., Bremander, A., Hendricks, O., Østergaard, M., Latocha, K. M., Andersen, L., Jensen, K. V., & Esbensen, B. A. (2024). Development of a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated SELf-MAnagement (INSELMA) intervention for patients with inflammatory arthritis. BMC Health Services Research, 24(1), [87]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-10463-1

Vancouver

Primdahl J, Bremander A, Hendricks O, Østergaard M, Latocha KM, Andersen L et al. Development of a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated SELf-MAnagement (INSELMA) intervention for patients with inflammatory arthritis. BMC Health Services Research. 2024;24(1). 87. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-10463-1

Author

Primdahl, Jette ; Bremander, Ann ; Hendricks, Oliver ; Østergaard, Mikkel ; Latocha, Kristine Marie ; Andersen, Lena ; Jensen, Kim Vilbaek ; Esbensen, Bente Appel. / Development of a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated SELf-MAnagement (INSELMA) intervention for patients with inflammatory arthritis. In: BMC Health Services Research. 2024 ; Vol. 24, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{cbd3f517a47a4086bc2f56c3d46e9a44,
title = "Development of a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated SELf-MAnagement (INSELMA) intervention for patients with inflammatory arthritis",
abstract = "Background: Apart from a consistent focus on treating inflammation, patients with inflammatory arthritis (IA) report a range of unmet needs. Many experience not only residual symptoms but also various other physical, psychological, and social effects. Therefore, this study aimed to develop a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated self-management (INSELMA) intervention for patients with IA, as an add-on treatment to usual outpatient care for those with substantial disease impact. Methods: This study followed the British Medical Research Council{\textquoteright}s updated framework for developing complex interventions. The process encompassed the following steps: (1) The evidence base was identified; (2) workshops were held, involving 38 relevant stakeholders (managers, physicians, nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, social workers, psychologists from hospitals and municipalities, and two patient research partners), to discuss and further develop the preliminary ideas; (3) relevant theories were identified (i.e., self-efficacy, acceptance and commitment therapy, and health literacy); (4) the intervention was modeled and remodeled and (5) the results, describing the final INSELMA intervention and outcomes. Results: The INSELMA intervention encompasses an initial biopsychosocial assessment, which is performed by a rheumatology nurse. Then, activities that the participant wishes to improve are identified and goals are set. The nurse refers the participant to a multidisciplinary team and coordinates their support and relevant services in the participant{\textquoteright}s municipality. In addition, the health professionals have the opportunity to hold two interdisciplinary conferences during the intervention period. The participant and the health professionals work to achieve the set goals during a 6-month period, which ends with a status assessment and a discussion of further needs. The INSELMA intervention aims to increase self-management, reduce the impact of IA (e.g., pain, fatigue, sleep problems, and absenteeism), and increase self-efficacy, quality of life, mental well-being, work ability, and physical activity. Conclusions: The development of the INSELMA intervention involved stakeholders from two Danish rheumatology outpatient clinics, patient research partners and municipalities. We believe that we have identified important mechanisms to increase the self-management and quality of life of people with IA and to decrease the disease impact in those who are substantially affected. The health professionals involved have developed competences in delivering the intervention and it is ready to be tested in a feasibility study.",
keywords = "Coherence, Goal setting, Multi-disciplinary, Nonpharmacological, Patient-specific functional scale, Psoriatic arthritis, Rheumatoid arthritis, Self-efficacy, Spondyloarthritis",
author = "Jette Primdahl and Ann Bremander and Oliver Hendricks and Mikkel {\O}stergaard and Latocha, {Kristine Marie} and Lena Andersen and Jensen, {Kim Vilbaek} and Esbensen, {Bente Appel}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024, The Author(s).",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1186/s12913-023-10463-1",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
journal = "BMC Health Services Research",
issn = "1472-6963",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Development of a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated SELf-MAnagement (INSELMA) intervention for patients with inflammatory arthritis

AU - Primdahl, Jette

AU - Bremander, Ann

AU - Hendricks, Oliver

AU - Østergaard, Mikkel

AU - Latocha, Kristine Marie

AU - Andersen, Lena

AU - Jensen, Kim Vilbaek

AU - Esbensen, Bente Appel

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024, The Author(s).

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Background: Apart from a consistent focus on treating inflammation, patients with inflammatory arthritis (IA) report a range of unmet needs. Many experience not only residual symptoms but also various other physical, psychological, and social effects. Therefore, this study aimed to develop a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated self-management (INSELMA) intervention for patients with IA, as an add-on treatment to usual outpatient care for those with substantial disease impact. Methods: This study followed the British Medical Research Council’s updated framework for developing complex interventions. The process encompassed the following steps: (1) The evidence base was identified; (2) workshops were held, involving 38 relevant stakeholders (managers, physicians, nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, social workers, psychologists from hospitals and municipalities, and two patient research partners), to discuss and further develop the preliminary ideas; (3) relevant theories were identified (i.e., self-efficacy, acceptance and commitment therapy, and health literacy); (4) the intervention was modeled and remodeled and (5) the results, describing the final INSELMA intervention and outcomes. Results: The INSELMA intervention encompasses an initial biopsychosocial assessment, which is performed by a rheumatology nurse. Then, activities that the participant wishes to improve are identified and goals are set. The nurse refers the participant to a multidisciplinary team and coordinates their support and relevant services in the participant’s municipality. In addition, the health professionals have the opportunity to hold two interdisciplinary conferences during the intervention period. The participant and the health professionals work to achieve the set goals during a 6-month period, which ends with a status assessment and a discussion of further needs. The INSELMA intervention aims to increase self-management, reduce the impact of IA (e.g., pain, fatigue, sleep problems, and absenteeism), and increase self-efficacy, quality of life, mental well-being, work ability, and physical activity. Conclusions: The development of the INSELMA intervention involved stakeholders from two Danish rheumatology outpatient clinics, patient research partners and municipalities. We believe that we have identified important mechanisms to increase the self-management and quality of life of people with IA and to decrease the disease impact in those who are substantially affected. The health professionals involved have developed competences in delivering the intervention and it is ready to be tested in a feasibility study.

AB - Background: Apart from a consistent focus on treating inflammation, patients with inflammatory arthritis (IA) report a range of unmet needs. Many experience not only residual symptoms but also various other physical, psychological, and social effects. Therefore, this study aimed to develop a complex Interdisciplinary Nurse-coordinated self-management (INSELMA) intervention for patients with IA, as an add-on treatment to usual outpatient care for those with substantial disease impact. Methods: This study followed the British Medical Research Council’s updated framework for developing complex interventions. The process encompassed the following steps: (1) The evidence base was identified; (2) workshops were held, involving 38 relevant stakeholders (managers, physicians, nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, social workers, psychologists from hospitals and municipalities, and two patient research partners), to discuss and further develop the preliminary ideas; (3) relevant theories were identified (i.e., self-efficacy, acceptance and commitment therapy, and health literacy); (4) the intervention was modeled and remodeled and (5) the results, describing the final INSELMA intervention and outcomes. Results: The INSELMA intervention encompasses an initial biopsychosocial assessment, which is performed by a rheumatology nurse. Then, activities that the participant wishes to improve are identified and goals are set. The nurse refers the participant to a multidisciplinary team and coordinates their support and relevant services in the participant’s municipality. In addition, the health professionals have the opportunity to hold two interdisciplinary conferences during the intervention period. The participant and the health professionals work to achieve the set goals during a 6-month period, which ends with a status assessment and a discussion of further needs. The INSELMA intervention aims to increase self-management, reduce the impact of IA (e.g., pain, fatigue, sleep problems, and absenteeism), and increase self-efficacy, quality of life, mental well-being, work ability, and physical activity. Conclusions: The development of the INSELMA intervention involved stakeholders from two Danish rheumatology outpatient clinics, patient research partners and municipalities. We believe that we have identified important mechanisms to increase the self-management and quality of life of people with IA and to decrease the disease impact in those who are substantially affected. The health professionals involved have developed competences in delivering the intervention and it is ready to be tested in a feasibility study.

KW - Coherence

KW - Goal setting

KW - Multi-disciplinary

KW - Nonpharmacological

KW - Patient-specific functional scale

KW - Psoriatic arthritis

KW - Rheumatoid arthritis

KW - Self-efficacy

KW - Spondyloarthritis

U2 - 10.1186/s12913-023-10463-1

DO - 10.1186/s12913-023-10463-1

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38233834

AN - SCOPUS:85182447670

VL - 24

JO - BMC Health Services Research

JF - BMC Health Services Research

SN - 1472-6963

IS - 1

M1 - 87

ER -

ID: 380214067