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Development of the face-to-face component and recruitment strategy of a primary care digital social intervention for patients with asthma: Qualitative focus groups and interviews with stakeholders

Karampatakis, Georgios Dimitrios; Kimber, Samuel; Wood, Helen E.; Griffiths, Chris J.; Taylor, Stephanie J. C.; Li, Xiancheng; Day, Bill; Mant, Jonathan; Relton, Clare; Watson, Jane S.; Marsh, Viv; Coulson, Neil S.; De Simoni, Anna

Development of the face-to-face component and recruitment strategy of a primary care digital social intervention for patients with asthma: Qualitative focus groups and interviews with stakeholders Thumbnail


Authors

Georgios Dimitrios Karampatakis

Samuel Kimber

Helen E. Wood

Chris J. Griffiths

Stephanie J. C. Taylor

Xiancheng Li

Bill Day

Jonathan Mant

Clare Relton

Jane S. Watson

Viv Marsh

Anna De Simoni



Abstract

BACKGROUND: 5.4 million people in the UK have asthma, with one third experiencing suboptimal control, leading to co-morbidities and increased healthcare use. A quarter of people with long-term conditions informally access peer support through online health communities (OHCs). However, integrating online peer support into primary care services to facilitate self-management is a new concept. OBJECTIVES: To develop together with stakeholders the content, delivery, and recruitment strategy of a digital social intervention to promote use of online peer support amongst asthma patients in primary care. METHODS: Data was collected by qualitative, audio-recorded, one-to-one interviews with clinicians, and focus groups with patients with asthma from East London general practices. The topic guide was informed by patient and public involvement work. Data collected was iterative (i.e. new ideas were added to subsequent interviews and focus groups). Verbatim transcripts were uploaded to NVivo12 and thematically analysed. RESULTS: Twenty patients from several ethnicities participated across five focus groups, and three general practitioners and three practice nurses were interviewed. The study's outputs included: the intervention's face-to-face content; content of clinician training; patient-facing leaflets/material; and a survey to recruit eligible patients. An intervention consisting of a structured consultation with a primary care clinician followed by OHC engagement, was developed based on three generated themes: 'introducing OHCs', describing how clinicians should introduce OHCs; 'OHC engagement', describing factors influencing OHC engagement; and 'clinician training'. CONCLUSION: Findings will assist clinicians in consultations about supporting self-management of patients through OHCs. Future research should evaluate feasibility, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of such support.

Citation

Karampatakis, G. D., Kimber, S., Wood, H. E., Griffiths, C. J., Taylor, S. J. C., Li, X., Day, B., Mant, J., Relton, C., Watson, J. S., Marsh, V., Coulson, N. S., & De Simoni, A. (2024). Development of the face-to-face component and recruitment strategy of a primary care digital social intervention for patients with asthma: Qualitative focus groups and interviews with stakeholders. European Journal of General Practice, 30(1), Article 2407594. https://doi.org/10.1080/13814788.2024.2407594

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 17, 2024
Online Publication Date Sep 27, 2024
Publication Date Dec 31, 2024
Deposit Date Oct 7, 2024
Publicly Available Date Oct 23, 2024
Journal European Journal of General Practice
Print ISSN 1381-4788
Electronic ISSN 1751-1402
Publisher Taylor and Francis
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 30
Issue 1
Article Number 2407594
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/13814788.2024.2407594
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/40290491

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