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Access to community support workers during hospital admission for people with spinal cord injury: a pilot study

Study design A descriptive qualitative study. Objectives To evaluate a pilot project enabling people with spinal cord injury (SCI) to have their support workers accompany them into a non-SCI specialist/public hospital (excluding ICU) to perform selected care. Setting The study was conducted in New Z...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Spinal cord series and cases 2021-01, Vol.7 (1), p.3-3, Article 3
Main Authors: Nunnerley, Joanne L., Martin, Rachelle A., Aldridge, Matthew, Bourke, John A., Simpson, Ian
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Study design A descriptive qualitative study. Objectives To evaluate a pilot project enabling people with spinal cord injury (SCI) to have their support workers accompany them into a non-SCI specialist/public hospital (excluding ICU) to perform selected care. Setting The study was conducted in New Zealand. Methods Interviews and focus groups with people with SCI, support workers, care agency staff, and hospital staff who participated in the pilot project. Results Twenty-five individuals participated in the study. Two themes captured participants’ experiences of the pilot: ‘Maintaining individualised care’ and ‘Role, tasks and responsibilities. Support workers were described as knowledgeable about SCI care needs and being better positioned to provide individualised care for people with SCI than general nursing staff. Participants with SCI felt less anxious having a support worker with them, and perceived less risk of acquiring secondary health complications during the hospital admission. Good communications is important to ensure there is a shared understanding of the role and responsibilities of having an unregistered support worker in the hospital environment. Conclusions Having their regular support worker during admission to public hospital improved the SCI-specific care received. Support workers reduced the demand on hospital nursing staff who did not always have the time or specialist SCI knowledge to provide individualised care. People with SCI may be more likely to access medical assistance earlier and not defer hospital admissions if they can have support workers accompany them into hospital.
ISSN:2058-6124
2058-6124
DOI:10.1038/s41394-020-00370-6