Family Involvement in the Care of Hospitalized Older Adults: Protocol for a Qualitative Evidence Synthesis
Judith B Vick, Blair P Golden, Sarah Cantrell, Melissa Louise Harris-Gersten, Mollie R Selmanoff, Susan Nicole Hastings, Tolu O Oyesanya, Karen M Goldstein, Courtney Van Houtven

TL;DR
This study outlines a research plan to understand how families participate in the care of older adults in hospitals and create a model to guide future improvements.
Contribution
The study introduces a protocol for a qualitative evidence synthesis to develop a conceptual model of family involvement in hospital care for older adults.
Findings
A qualitative evidence synthesis protocol was developed using the SPIDER tool for eligibility criteria and search strategies.
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A conceptual model will be created with input from community engagement panels to refine it.
Abstract
Older adults are frequently hospitalized. Family involvement during these hospitalizations is incompletely characterized in the literature. This study aimed to better understand how families are involved in the care of hospitalized older adults and develop a conceptual model describing the phenomenon of family involvement in the care of hospitalized older adults. We describe the protocol of a qualitative evidence synthesis (QES), a systematic review of qualitative studies. We chose to focus on qualitative studies given the complexity and multifaceted nature of family involvement in care, a type of topic best understood through qualitative inquiry. The protocol describes our process of developing a research question and eligibility criteria for inclusion in our QES based on the SPIDER (Sample, Phenomenon of Interest, Design, Evaluation, and Research type) tool. It describes the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeriatric Care and Nursing Homes · Family and Patient Care in Intensive Care Units · Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
