Educational group visits for the management of chronic health conditions: A systematic review |
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Authors: | Ana R. Quiñ ones,Jeannette Richardson,Michele Freeman,Rochelle Fu,Maya E. O&rsquo Neil,Makalapua Motu&rsquo apuaka,Devan Kansagara |
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Affiliation: | 1. Portland VA Medical Center, Health Services Research & Development, Portland, USA;2. Oregon Health & Science University, Public Health & Preventive Medicine, Portland, USA;3. Oregon Health & Science University, Psychiatry, Portland, USA;4. General Internal Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, USA |
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Abstract: | ObjectiveReview the effectiveness of group visits (appointments of multiple patients) on quality of life, function, self-efficacy, utilization, and biophysical outcomes in randomized controlled trials of patients with chronic conditions.MethodsWe searched MEDLINE®, Cochrane, CINAHL, and PsycINFO to January 2013 for English-language trials of educational group visits led by non-prescribing facilitators (e.g., peer educators).ResultsWe report on 80 arthritis/falls (n = 22), asthma/COPD (n = 10), CHF/hypertension (n = 12), diabetes (n = 29), multiple conditions (n = 4), and pain (n = 4) studies. We found moderate evidence of improved short-term self-efficacy in patients with arthritis (10 studies) and diabetes (10 studies). We found no consistent evidence of improved quality of life; however a moderately strong body of evidence suggests peer-led community-based programs might improve quality of life and utilization in patients with multiple chronic conditions. Meta-analyses found short- (14 studies; mean change HbA1c = −0.27, CI = −0.44, 0.11) and long-term (10 studies; mean change HbA1c = −0.23, CI = −0.44, −0.02) glycemic improvement.ConclusionsGroup visits may improve self-efficacy and glycemic control. There was little consistent evidence of improved quality of life, functional status, or utilization.Practice implicationsGroup visits represent a reasonable alternative for educating patients with chronic illness, though varied participation/retention suggests they should not be the sole alternative. |
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Keywords: | Group visits Chronic disease Health education Chronic disease self-management |
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