Barriers and facilitators to implementation of epilepsy self-management programs: a systematic review using qualitative evidence synthesis methods.
Abstract
<h4>Background</h4>Epilepsy affects nearly 50 million people worldwide. Self-management
is critical for individuals with epilepsy in order to maintain optimal physical, cognitive,
and emotional health. Implementing and adopting a self-management program requires
considering many factors at the person, program, and systems levels. We conducted
a systematic review of qualitative and mixed-methods studies to identify facilitators
and barriers that impact implementation and adoption of self-management programs for
adults with epilepsy.<h4>Methods</h4>We used established systematic review methodologies
for qualitative and mixed-methods studies. We included studies addressing facilitators
(i.e., factors that aided) or barriers (i.e., factors that impeded) to implementation
and adoption of self-management interventions for adults with epilepsy. We conducted
a narrative thematic synthesis to identify facilitators and barriers.<h4>Results</h4>The
literature search identified 2700 citations; 13 studies met eligibility criteria.
Our synthesis identified five themes that categorize facilitators and barriers to
successful implementation epilepsy self-management: (1) relevance, intervention content
that facilitates acquisition of self-management skills; (2) personalization, intervention
components that account for the individual's social, physical, and environmental characteristics;
(3) intervention components, components and dosing of the intervention; (4) technology
considerations, considerations that account for individual's use, familiarity with,
and ownership of technology; and (5) clinician interventionist, role and preparation
of the individual who leads intervention. We identified facilitators in 11 of the
13 studies and barriers in 11 of the 13 studies and classified these by social-ecological
level (i.e., patient/caregiver, program, site/system).<h4>Conclusion</h4>Identification
of facilitators and barriers at multiple levels provides insight into disease-specific
factors that influence implementation and adoption of self-management programs for
individuals with epilepsy. Our findings indicate that involving individuals with epilepsy
and their caregivers in intervention development, and then tailoring intervention
content during the intervention, can help ensure the content is relevant to intervention
participants. Our findings also indicate the role of the clinician (i.e., the individual
who provides self-management education) is important to intervention implementation,
and key issues with clinicians were identified as barriers and opportunities for improvement.
Overall, our findings have practical value for those seeking to implement and adopt
self-management interventions for epilepsy and other chronic illnesses.<h4>Systematic
review registration</h4>PROSPERO registration number is CRD42018098604.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22412Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1186/s13643-020-01322-9Publication Info
Lewinski, Allison A; Shapiro, Abigail; Gierisch, Jennifer M; Goldstein, Karen M; Blalock,
Dan V; Luedke, Matthew W; ... Williams, John W (2020). Barriers and facilitators to implementation of epilepsy self-management programs:
a systematic review using qualitative evidence synthesis methods. Systematic reviews, 9(1). pp. 92. 10.1186/s13643-020-01322-9. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22412.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Daniel Blalock
Associate Consulting Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
I am a behavioral health researcher with a background in Clinical Psychology and Experimental
Psychology. My research interests include broad processes of behavior change and
self-regulation as well as psychometric measurement and research methods/statistics.
My specific research endeavors include 1) the measurement and behavior change applicability
of constructs related to self-control, 2) measurement and interventions to improve
self-regulatory health behaviors including medication
Hayden Barry Bosworth
Professor in Population Health Sciences
Dr. Bosworth is a health services researcher and Deputy Director of the Center of
Innovation to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation (ADAPT) at the Durham
VA Medical Center. He is also Vice Chair of Education and Professor of Population
Health Sciences. He is also a Professor of Medicine, Psychiatry, and Nursing at Duke
University Medical Center and Adjunct Professor in Health Policy and Administration
at the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina at Cha
Connor David Drake
Assistant Professor in Population Health Sciences
Connor Drake is a health services researcher and implementation scientist. His research
interests are at the intersection of primary care, population health management, social
determinants of health, chronic illness care redesign, and health equity. He has experience
with policy analysis, electronic health record data, mixed and multi methods, community
engaged research, and implementation and dissemination methods. Dr. Drake's current
research projects include leveraging teleme
Jennifer M. Gierisch
Associate Professor in Population Health Sciences
Jennifer Gierisch, PhD, is behavioral scientist and health services researcher. She
is an Associate Professor in the Department of Population Heath Sciences and the Department
of Medicine at Duke University. She is a core investigator with the Center of Innovation
to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation (ADAPT) where she serves as the
leader of the Partnered Research Methods Core (PRESTO) and Director of the VA OAA
Health Services Research Postdoctoral Fellowship
Karen M. Goldstein
Associate Professor of Medicine
Dr. Goldstein's research interests include women's health, cardiovascular risk reduction,
evidence synthesis methodology and peer support.
Aatif Mairaj Husain
Professor of Neurology
Allison A. Lewinski
Assistant Research Professor in the School of Nursing
I am a health services researcher with a focus on digital interventions and chronic
illness self-management. My work sits at the intersection of precision medicine and
population health. My interest in developing and implementing sustainable interventions
to improve health outcomes, and examining intervention implementation and adaptation,
is an extension of my experiences in public health and nursing. Therefore, I aim to
develop meaningful interventions that are relevant, appropriate, and can b
Matthew William Luedke
Associate Professor of Neurology
I have diverse research interests and collaborations. Clinical research interests
include epilepsy quality-of-life interventions and therapeutics and acute care neurological
issues like post-cardiac arrest management and quality-of-care issues. I work with
the Duke hyperbaric chamber team on clinical neurophysiological monitoring of ketone-related
research.
Saurabh Ranjan Sinha
Associate Professor of Neurology
My research and clinical interests are in improving surgical outcomes for patients
with intractable seizures and normal imaging studies (non-lesional epilepsy). I also
have a research interest in ICU EEG monitoring with emphasis on quantitative EEG
and seizure burden.
Tung T Tran
Assistant Professor of Neurology
John Wiley Williams Jr.
Professor of Medicine
John Williams, MD, MHS, is a Professor of Medicine at Duke University Medical Center
and a past recipient of VA Health Services Career Development and a Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation Generalist Faculty Scholar Awards. He received his bachelor and MD degrees
from the University of North Carolina. Dr. Williams completed residency training at
the University of Iowa and a research fellowship at Duke University. He is a primary
care internist who is trained in epidemiology, biostatistics, and litera
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