2021
DOI: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.16365.2
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Patient, caregiver, and health care provider perspectives on barriers and facilitators to heart failure care in Kerala, India: A qualitative study

Abstract: Background: Deficits in quality of care for patients with heart failure (HF) contribute to high mortality in this population. This qualitative study aimed to understand the barriers and facilitators to high-quality HF care in Kerala, India. Methods: Semi-structured, in-depth interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of health care providers (n=13), patients and caregivers (n=14). Additionally, focus group discussions (n=3) were conducted with patients and their caregivers. All interviews and focus grou… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…77 Caregivers also reported providing health maintenance behaviors (eg, activities of daily living [ADLs]), which do not appear in self-care maintenance activities 7 such as "providing personal care such as toileting, dressing, bathing" and "basic self-care activities" 29,32,64,78 In keeping with the 2015 synthesis, caregivers' activities continued to fall into the 2 categories of "hands-on" and "hands-off" activities. Although few articles reported "hands-on" self-care maintenance activities, such as caregivers directly administering medications (n = 5/58, 9%), all articles reported "hands-off"' maintenance activities, India (2) 36,41 Iran (4) 14,27,58,63 Italy (3) 15,25,51 Jordan (1) 13 Lithuania (1) 11 Norway (3) 11,42,61 Portugal (1) 54 Slovenia (1) 57 South Korea (1) 33 Sweden (3) 16,30,49 United Kingdom (7) Not specified (1) 38 Australia (1) 24 Japan (1) 32 Sweden (1) 43 United States (4) 22,52,60,67 Sweden (1) 72 United Kingdom (1) 74 United States (5) [68][69][70][71]73 Sample size (range of no. of participants) Mother/father (5) 11,21,…”
Section: Study Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…77 Caregivers also reported providing health maintenance behaviors (eg, activities of daily living [ADLs]), which do not appear in self-care maintenance activities 7 such as "providing personal care such as toileting, dressing, bathing" and "basic self-care activities" 29,32,64,78 In keeping with the 2015 synthesis, caregivers' activities continued to fall into the 2 categories of "hands-on" and "hands-off" activities. Although few articles reported "hands-on" self-care maintenance activities, such as caregivers directly administering medications (n = 5/58, 9%), all articles reported "hands-off"' maintenance activities, India (2) 36,41 Iran (4) 14,27,58,63 Italy (3) 15,25,51 Jordan (1) 13 Lithuania (1) 11 Norway (3) 11,42,61 Portugal (1) 54 Slovenia (1) 57 South Korea (1) 33 Sweden (3) 16,30,49 United Kingdom (7) Not specified (1) 38 Australia (1) 24 Japan (1) 32 Sweden (1) 43 United States (4) 22,52,60,67 Sweden (1) 72 United Kingdom (1) 74 United States (5) [68][69][70][71]73 Sample size (range of no. of participants) Mother/father (5) 11,21,…”
Section: Study Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although few articles reported "hands-on" self-care maintenance activities, such as caregivers directly administering medications (n = 5/58, 9%), all articles reported "hands-off"' maintenance activities, India (2) 36,41 Iran (4) 14,27,58,63 Italy (3) 15,25,51 Jordan (1) 13 Lithuania (1) 11 Norway (3) 11,42,61 Portugal (1) 54 Slovenia (1) 57 South Korea (1) 33 Sweden (3) 16,30,49 United Kingdom (7) Not specified (1) 38 Australia (1) 24 Japan (1) 32 Sweden (1) 43 United States (4) 22,52,60,67 Sweden (1) 72 United Kingdom (1) 74 United States (5) [68][69][70][71]73 Sample size (range of no. of participants) Mother/father (5) 11,21,26,39,53 Sibling (4) 21,38,44,53 Grandchildren (5) 35,46,48,…”
Section: Study Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%