21
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Secondary health conditions and spinal cord injury: an uphill battle in the journey of care

      review-article

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Purpose

          To understand the journey of care in the prevention and management of secondary health conditions (SHCs) following spinal cord injury (SCI).

          Method

          This was a case study design with ‘Ontario’ as the case. The Network Episode Model was used as the conceptual framework. Data sources included in depth interviews with persons with SCI, care providers, and policy and decision makers. Document analysis was also conducted on relevant materials and policies. Key informants were selected by purposeful sampling as well as snowball sampling to provide maximum variation. Data analysis was an iterative process and involved descriptive and interpretive analyses. A coding structure was developed based on the conceptual framework which allowed for free nodes when emerging ideas or themes were identified.

          Results

          Twenty-eight individuals were interviewed (14 persons with SCI and 14 persons representing care providers, community advocacy organization representatives, system service delivery administrators and policy-makers). A major over-arching domain that emerged from the data was the concept of ‘fighting’. Eleven themes were identified: at the micro-individual level: (i) social isolation and system abandonment, (ii) funding and equitable care, (iii) bounded freedom and self-management; at the meso care provider level: (iv) gender and caregiving strain, (v) help versus disempowerment, (vi) holistic care-thinking outside the box, (vii) poor communication and coordination of care; and at the macro health system level: (viii) fight for access and availability, (ix) models of care tensions, (x) private versus public tensions and (xi) rigid rules and policies.

          Conclusions

          Findings suggest that the journey is challenging and a persistent uphill struggle for persons with SCI, care providers, and community-based advocates. If we are to make significant gains in minimizing the incidence and severity of SHCs, we need to tailor efforts at the health system level.

          Implications for Rehabilitation
          • Secondary health conditions are problematic for individuals with a spinal cord injury (SCI).

          • This study aimed to understand the journey of care in the prevention and management of secondary health conditions (SHCs) following SCI.

          • Findings suggest that the journey is challenging and a persistent uphill struggle for persons with SCI, care providers, and community-based advocates.

          • All stakeholders involved recognized the disparities in access to care and resources that exist within the system. We recommend that if we are to make significant gains in minimizing the incidence and severity of SHCs, we need to tailor efforts at the health system level.

          Related collections

          Most cited references46

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          Trends in life expectancy after spinal cord injury.

          To investigate whether there have been improvements in survival after spinal cord injury (SCI) over time, both in the critical first 2 years after injury and in the longer term. Pooled repeated observations analysis of person-years. For each person-year, the outcome variable is survival and mortality, and the explanatory variables include age, level and grade of injury, and calendar year (the main focus of the analyses). The method can be viewed as a generalization of proportional hazards regression. Model spinal cord injury systems and hospital SCI units across the United States. Persons (N=30,822) admitted to a Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems facility a minimum of 1 day after injury. Only persons over 10 years of age and known not to be ventilator dependent were included. These persons contributed 323,618 person-years of data, with 4980 deaths, over the 1973 to 2004 study period. Not applicable. Survival. Other factors being equal, over the last 3 decades there has been a 40% decline in mortality during the critical first 2 years after injury. However, the decline in mortality over time in the post-2-year period is small and not statistically significant. The absence of a substantial decline in mortality after the first 2 years postinjury is contrary to widely held impressions. Nevertheless, the finding is based on a large database and sensitive analytic methods and is consistent with previous research. Improvements in critical care medicine after spinal cord injury may explain the marked decline in short-term mortality. In contrast, although there have no doubt been improvements in long-term rehabilitative care, their effect in enhancing the life span of persons with SCI appears to have been overstated.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            Utilization of health services following spinal cord injury: a 6-year follow-up study.

            Cohort study with 6-years follow-up. To describe the utilization of health services by persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) and compare it with that of the general population. Alberta, Canada. All persons who sustained an SCI in Alberta between April 1992 and March 1994 were followed from date of injury to 6 years postinjury. Cases were matched (1:5) with controls randomly selected from the general population and matched for age, gender, and region of residence. Administrative data from centralized health care databases were compiled to provide a complete picture of health care use, including hospitalizations, physician contacts, long-term care admissions, home care services, and the occurrence of secondary complications. In all, 233 individuals with SCI and 1165 matched controls were followed for 6 years. Compared with the control group, persons with SCI were rehospitalized 2.6 times more often, spent 3.3 more days in hospital, were 2.7 times more likely to have a physician contact, and required 30 times more hours of home care services. Of those with SCI, 47.6% were treated for a urinary tract infection, 33.8% for pneumonia, 27.5% for depression, and 19.7% for decubitus ulcer. SCI places a heavy burden on the health care system. Persons with SCI have greater rates of contact with the health system compared with the general population. Secondary complications continue to affect persons with SCI long after the acute trauma.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              Of pride and prejudice: the role of sociology and social networks in integrating the health sciences.

              Calls have been issued for understanding the "contexts" or "environment" shaping the causes and consequences of health and health care. Existing efforts raise concerns about how a panorama of influences can be considered simultaneously. Sociology's view of contexts as social network structures that shape and are shaped in social interaction offers one key to resolving this dilemma. Because social networks have become central in the social, natural, and physical sciences, this perspective provides a common platform for bringing in sociology's rich theoretical and methodological insights. Yet, to do this well, three conditions must shape our response. First, all levels relevant to health and health care must be considered, separated out, and linked by network mechanisms. The genetic-biological level, perhaps the most foreign level to sociologists, represents the greatest need and best prospect for advancing a sociologically based solution. Second, room must be made to tailor models to populations, whether defined socially or medically. Third, sociologists must find a voice within "big science " to address problems from social construction to social causation that contribute to basic social processes as well as health. I trace developments in the Network-Episode Model as one theoretical starting point.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Disabil Rehabil
                Disabil Rehabil
                DRE
                Disability and Rehabilitation
                Informa Healthcare
                0963-8288
                1464-5165
                June 2013
                June 2013
                : 35
                : 11-13
                : 894-906
                Affiliations
                1Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto , Toronto, Canada
                2Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network , Toronto, Canada
                3Department of Medicine, University of Toronto , Toronto, Canada
                4Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto , Toronto, Canada
                5Centre for Health Services and Policy Research, Queen’s University , Kingston, Canada
                6Department of Community Health and Epidemiology and School of Rehabilitation Therapy, Queen’s University , Kingston, Canada
                7Department of Physical Therapy, University of Toronto , Toronto, Canada
                8Graduate Department of Rehabilitation Science, University of Toronto , Toronto, Canada
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Sara J.T. Guilcher, c/o Dr. Susan Jaglal, Department of Physical Therapy, 160–500 University Ave. , Toronto, Ontario, M5G 1V7, Canada. Tel: +1 416 946 8563. Fax: +1 416 946 8562. E-mail: sara.guilcher@ 123456utoronto.ca
                Article
                10.3109/09638288.2012.721048
                3665227
                23020250
                99897e27-06c2-4985-b941-94ce39cb7b99
                © 2013 Informa UK, Ltd.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the source is credited.

                History
                : 01 March 2012
                : 26 June 2012
                : 10 August 2012
                Categories
                Research Papers

                Health & Social care
                health services,secondary health conditions,spinal cord injury
                Health & Social care
                health services, secondary health conditions, spinal cord injury

                Comments

                Comment on this article