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Profilbild för State of science in Cardiovascular Person-centred Practice: A systematic review

State of science in Cardiovascular Person-centred Practice: A systematic review Har passerat

Onsdag 15 maj 2024 15:39 - 15:51 G4

Moderator: Joakim Öhlén
Rapportör: Vaibhav Tyagi

Spår: State of science

Background: Cardiovascular Person-centred Practice (cv-PCP) has increasingly changed the way care is provided to patients with cardiovascular conditions (Rossi et al, 2023). However, person-centeredness is often poorly defined in research and inconsistently implemented in practice. There is a need to systematically synthesize current evidence to identify avenues for development. In this study, we use theoretical concepts from the Person-centered Practice Framework to define and review cv-PCP (McCormack and McCance, 2017). Objective: This study aims to describe the current state of knowledge in cv-PCP and identify limitations, challenges, and potential opportunities for advancement. Method: A systematic review is currently underway. Terms related to cardiovascular care, person-centred practice, person-centredness, and patient-centred practice were systematically searched in Medline, Embase, Scopus, Cochrane Library, and CINAHL databases with support from a health sciences librarian. Journal publications, literature reviews and commentaries published since 2013 in English were included to capture contemporary practice. Studies were screened by two independent reviewers and cross-verified and merged by a third independent reviewer. All the reviewers have extensive experience in cardiovascular care and person-centred practice theory and measurement. Publications that met the inclusion criteria were critically appraised using CASP checklist (2018). PRISMA checklist was used for rigour and reporting. Data will be synthesized and categorized on the following criteria (i) definition of cv-PCP, (ii) measurement of cv-PCP, (iii) population of interest and (iv) cultural and global context. Results: At the time of submission, the review is underway and progressing as planned. Results will be available at the time of the conference, and we will use this opportunity to present our findings for the first time. Conclusion: This review will be the first to present the current state of science in cv-PCP using a globally accepted PCP framework and will provide recommendations to ensure the use of theory-based frameworks in guiding the implementation of person-centred cardiovascular care. 

Språk

English

Seminarietyp

Förinspelat + På plats

Föreläsningsformat

Orals

Konferens

GCPCC

Authors

Vaibhav Tyagi, Dion Candelaria, Brendan McCormack, Robyn Gallagher, Jeroen Hendriks

Föreläsare

Profilbild för Joakim Öhlén

Joakim Öhlén Moderator

Professor, Former Centre Director
GPCC, University of Gothenburg Centre for Person-Centred Care

Joakim Öhlén, PhD, RN, is professor in nursing at the Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg in Sweden, and has a clinical appointment as senior consultant nurse to the Palliative Centre at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg. He is the former Centre Director at the University of Gothenburg Centre for Person-Centred Care and leads a research programme on the implementation of person-centred palliative care. He has extensive teaching experience in palliative care, nursing and research methods, and is appointed as Excellent Teacher at the University of Gothenburg.
Personal page https://www.gu.se/en/about/find-staff/joakimohlen

Profilbild för Vaibhav Tyagi

Vaibhav Tyagi Rapportör

Senior Academic Research Fellow
University of Sydney

Dr Vaibhav Tyagi is a quantitative researcher and uses advanced statistics, computer programming and software tools in his healthcare research. He has an engineering degree and a PhD in Cognitive neuroscience and psychology. He is passionate about Person-centred healthcare practice and creativity & Innovation in healthcare practice.

Dr Tyagi has 5 years of experience as a lecturer in nursing and is currently working with nursing professionals to adapt (and adopt) theoretical models of person-centred practice in Australia.