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Managing faecal incontinence in people with advanced dementia resident in care homes (FINCH) study: A realist synthesis of the evidence

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Managing faecal incontinence in people with advanced dementia resident in care homes (FINCH) study: A realist synthesis of the evidence. / Goodman, Claire; Norton, Christine; Buswell, Marina et al.
In: Health Technology Assessment, Vol. 21, No. 42, 01.08.2017, p. 1-219.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Goodman, C, Norton, C, Buswell, M, Russell, B, Harari, D, Harwood, R, Roe, B, Rycroft-Malone, J, Drennan, VM, Fader, M, Maden, M, Cummings, K & Bunn, F 2017, 'Managing faecal incontinence in people with advanced dementia resident in care homes (FINCH) study: A realist synthesis of the evidence', Health Technology Assessment, vol. 21, no. 42, pp. 1-219. https://doi.org/10.3310/hta21420

APA

Goodman, C., Norton, C., Buswell, M., Russell, B., Harari, D., Harwood, R., Roe, B., Rycroft-Malone, J., Drennan, V. M., Fader, M., Maden, M., Cummings, K., & Bunn, F. (2017). Managing faecal incontinence in people with advanced dementia resident in care homes (FINCH) study: A realist synthesis of the evidence. Health Technology Assessment, 21(42), 1-219. https://doi.org/10.3310/hta21420

Vancouver

Goodman C, Norton C, Buswell M, Russell B, Harari D, Harwood R et al. Managing faecal incontinence in people with advanced dementia resident in care homes (FINCH) study: A realist synthesis of the evidence. Health Technology Assessment. 2017 Aug 1;21(42):1-219. doi: 10.3310/hta21420

Author

Goodman, Claire ; Norton, Christine ; Buswell, Marina et al. / Managing faecal incontinence in people with advanced dementia resident in care homes (FINCH) study : A realist synthesis of the evidence. In: Health Technology Assessment. 2017 ; Vol. 21, No. 42. pp. 1-219.

Bibtex

@article{e7fd18a2364641a59e80fbf14d7cfff1,
title = "Managing faecal incontinence in people with advanced dementia resident in care homes (FINCH) study: A realist synthesis of the evidence",
abstract = "Background: Eighty per cent of care home residents in the UK are living with dementia. The prevalence of faecal incontinence (FI) in care homes is estimated to range from 30% to 50%. There is limited evidence of what is effective in the reduction and management of FI in care homes. Objective: To provide a theory-driven explanation of the effectiveness of programmes that aim to improve FI in people with advanced dementia in care homes. Design: A realist synthesis. This was an iterative approach that involved scoping of the literature and consultation with five stakeholder groups, a systematic search and analysis of published and unpublished evidence, and a validation of programme theories with relevant stakeholders. Data sources: The databases searched included PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, The Cochrane Library, Scopus, SocAbs, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, BiblioMap, Sirius, OpenGrey, Social Care Online and the National Research Register. Results: The scoping identified six programme theories with related context-mechanism-outcome configurations for testing. These addressed (1) clinician-led support, assessment and review, (2) the contribution of teaching and support for care home staff on how to reduce and manage FI, (3) the causes and prevention of constipation, (4) how the cognitive and physical capacity of the resident affect outcomes, (5) how the potential for recovery, reduction and management of FI is understood by those involved and (6) how the care of people living with dementia and FI is integral to the work patterns of the care home and its staff. Data extraction was completed on 62 core papers with iterative searches of linked literature. Dementia was a known risk factor for FI, but its affect on the uptake of different interventions and the dementia-specific continence and toileting skills staff required was not addressed. Most care home residents with FI will be doubly incontinent and, therefore, there is limited value in focusing solely on FI or on single causes of FI such as constipation. Clinical assessment, knowledge of the causes of FI and strategies that recognise the individuals{\textquoteright} preferences are necessary contextual factors. Valuing the intimate and personal care work that care home staff provide to people living with dementia and addressing the dementia-related challenges when providing continence care within the daily work routines are key to helping to reduce and manage FI in this population. Limitations: The synthesis was constrained by limited evidence specific to FI and people with dementia in care homes and by the lack of dementia-specific evidence on continence aids. Conclusions: This realist synthesis provides a theory-driven understanding of the conditions under which improvement in care for care home residents living with dementia and FI is likely to be successful.",
author = "Claire Goodman and Christine Norton and Marina Buswell and Bridget Russell and Danielle Harari and Rowan Harwood and Brenda Roe and Jo Rycroft-Malone and Drennan, {Vari M.} and Mandy Fader and Michelle Maden and Karen Cummings and Frances Bunn",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.3310/hta21420",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "1--219",
journal = "Health Technology Assessment",
issn = "1366-5278",
publisher = "National Co-ordinating Centre for HTA",
number = "42",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Managing faecal incontinence in people with advanced dementia resident in care homes (FINCH) study

T2 - A realist synthesis of the evidence

AU - Goodman, Claire

AU - Norton, Christine

AU - Buswell, Marina

AU - Russell, Bridget

AU - Harari, Danielle

AU - Harwood, Rowan

AU - Roe, Brenda

AU - Rycroft-Malone, Jo

AU - Drennan, Vari M.

AU - Fader, Mandy

AU - Maden, Michelle

AU - Cummings, Karen

AU - Bunn, Frances

PY - 2017/8/1

Y1 - 2017/8/1

N2 - Background: Eighty per cent of care home residents in the UK are living with dementia. The prevalence of faecal incontinence (FI) in care homes is estimated to range from 30% to 50%. There is limited evidence of what is effective in the reduction and management of FI in care homes. Objective: To provide a theory-driven explanation of the effectiveness of programmes that aim to improve FI in people with advanced dementia in care homes. Design: A realist synthesis. This was an iterative approach that involved scoping of the literature and consultation with five stakeholder groups, a systematic search and analysis of published and unpublished evidence, and a validation of programme theories with relevant stakeholders. Data sources: The databases searched included PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, The Cochrane Library, Scopus, SocAbs, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, BiblioMap, Sirius, OpenGrey, Social Care Online and the National Research Register. Results: The scoping identified six programme theories with related context-mechanism-outcome configurations for testing. These addressed (1) clinician-led support, assessment and review, (2) the contribution of teaching and support for care home staff on how to reduce and manage FI, (3) the causes and prevention of constipation, (4) how the cognitive and physical capacity of the resident affect outcomes, (5) how the potential for recovery, reduction and management of FI is understood by those involved and (6) how the care of people living with dementia and FI is integral to the work patterns of the care home and its staff. Data extraction was completed on 62 core papers with iterative searches of linked literature. Dementia was a known risk factor for FI, but its affect on the uptake of different interventions and the dementia-specific continence and toileting skills staff required was not addressed. Most care home residents with FI will be doubly incontinent and, therefore, there is limited value in focusing solely on FI or on single causes of FI such as constipation. Clinical assessment, knowledge of the causes of FI and strategies that recognise the individuals’ preferences are necessary contextual factors. Valuing the intimate and personal care work that care home staff provide to people living with dementia and addressing the dementia-related challenges when providing continence care within the daily work routines are key to helping to reduce and manage FI in this population. Limitations: The synthesis was constrained by limited evidence specific to FI and people with dementia in care homes and by the lack of dementia-specific evidence on continence aids. Conclusions: This realist synthesis provides a theory-driven understanding of the conditions under which improvement in care for care home residents living with dementia and FI is likely to be successful.

AB - Background: Eighty per cent of care home residents in the UK are living with dementia. The prevalence of faecal incontinence (FI) in care homes is estimated to range from 30% to 50%. There is limited evidence of what is effective in the reduction and management of FI in care homes. Objective: To provide a theory-driven explanation of the effectiveness of programmes that aim to improve FI in people with advanced dementia in care homes. Design: A realist synthesis. This was an iterative approach that involved scoping of the literature and consultation with five stakeholder groups, a systematic search and analysis of published and unpublished evidence, and a validation of programme theories with relevant stakeholders. Data sources: The databases searched included PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, The Cochrane Library, Scopus, SocAbs, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, BiblioMap, Sirius, OpenGrey, Social Care Online and the National Research Register. Results: The scoping identified six programme theories with related context-mechanism-outcome configurations for testing. These addressed (1) clinician-led support, assessment and review, (2) the contribution of teaching and support for care home staff on how to reduce and manage FI, (3) the causes and prevention of constipation, (4) how the cognitive and physical capacity of the resident affect outcomes, (5) how the potential for recovery, reduction and management of FI is understood by those involved and (6) how the care of people living with dementia and FI is integral to the work patterns of the care home and its staff. Data extraction was completed on 62 core papers with iterative searches of linked literature. Dementia was a known risk factor for FI, but its affect on the uptake of different interventions and the dementia-specific continence and toileting skills staff required was not addressed. Most care home residents with FI will be doubly incontinent and, therefore, there is limited value in focusing solely on FI or on single causes of FI such as constipation. Clinical assessment, knowledge of the causes of FI and strategies that recognise the individuals’ preferences are necessary contextual factors. Valuing the intimate and personal care work that care home staff provide to people living with dementia and addressing the dementia-related challenges when providing continence care within the daily work routines are key to helping to reduce and manage FI in this population. Limitations: The synthesis was constrained by limited evidence specific to FI and people with dementia in care homes and by the lack of dementia-specific evidence on continence aids. Conclusions: This realist synthesis provides a theory-driven understanding of the conditions under which improvement in care for care home residents living with dementia and FI is likely to be successful.

U2 - 10.3310/hta21420

DO - 10.3310/hta21420

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28805188

AN - SCOPUS:85029230012

VL - 21

SP - 1

EP - 219

JO - Health Technology Assessment

JF - Health Technology Assessment

SN - 1366-5278

IS - 42

ER -