Systems modelling as an approach for eliciting the mechanisms for hip fracture recovery among older adults in a participatory stakeholder engagement setting.

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Ansah, John Pastor

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Chia, Aloysius Wei-Yan

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Koh, Vanessa Jean Wen

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Lai, Wei Xuan

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Koh, Joyce Suang Bee

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Goh, Kiat Sern

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Yeo, William

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Howe, Tet Sen

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Seow, Dennis Chuen Chai

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Mamun, Kaysar

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Balasubramanian, Diraviyam

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Varman, Surendra Doraiswamy

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Yeo, Andy Kuei Siong

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Elamin, Amal

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Chan, Angelique Wei-Ming

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Matchar, David Bruce

dc.date.accessioned

2023-08-07T01:10:35Z

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2023-08-07T01:10:35Z

dc.date.issued

2023-01

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2023-08-07T01:10:27Z

dc.description.abstract

Introduction

Due to an aging population, the rising prevalence and incidence of hip fractures and the associated health and economic burden present a challenge to healthcare systems worldwide. Studies have shown that a complex interplay of physiological, psychological, and social factors often affects the recovery trajectories of older adults with hip fractures, often complicating the recovery process.

Methods

This research aims to actively engage stakeholders (including doctors, physiotherapists, hip fracture patients, and caregivers) using the systems modeling methodology of Group Model Building (GMB) to elicit the factors that promote or inhibit hip fracture recovery, incorporating a feedback perspective to inform system-wide interventions. Hip fracture stakeholder engagement was facilitated through the Group Model Building approach in a two-half-day workshop of 25 stakeholders. This approach combined different techniques to develop a comprehensive qualitative whole-system view model of the factors that promote or inhibit hip fracture recovery.

Results

A conceptual, qualitative model of the dynamics of hip fracture recovery was developed that draws on stakeholders' personal experiences through a moderated interaction. Stakeholders identified four domains (i.e., expectation formation, rehabilitation, affordability/availability, and resilience building) that play a significant role in the hip fracture recovery journey..

Discussion

The insight that recovery of loss of function due to hip fracture is attributed to (a) the recognition of a gap between pre-fracture physical function and current physical function; and (b) the marshaling of psychological resilience to respond promptly to a physical functional loss via uptake of rehabilitation services is supported by findings and has several policy implications.
dc.identifier.issn

2673-6861

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2673-6861

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/28680

dc.language

eng

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Frontiers Media SA

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Frontiers in rehabilitation sciences

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10.3389/fresc.2023.1184484

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group model building

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hip fracture recovery

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rehabilitation

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resilience building

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system dynamics modelling

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Systems modelling as an approach for eliciting the mechanisms for hip fracture recovery among older adults in a participatory stakeholder engagement setting.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Matchar, David Bruce|0000-0003-3020-2108

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1184484

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Medicine

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Pathology

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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University Institutes and Centers

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Duke Global Health Institute

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

4

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