Yarning to reduce take own leave events in First Nations patients presenting to the Emergency Department‐presenting the qualitative themes and co‐design of the Deadly RED project

Author:

Davison Michelle123ORCID,Chan Jason2,Clarke Meg2,Mitchell Caroline2,Yan Alan2,Henaway Elwyn4

Affiliation:

1. Sunshine Coast University Hospital Queensland Australia

2. Redcliffe Hospital Emergency Department Queensland Australia

3. Gold Coast School of Medicine (Birtinya Sunshine Coast Campus) Griffith University Gold Coast Queensland Australia

4. Metro North Hospital and Health Service Herston Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractIssue AddressedThe Deadly RED redesign and implementation research aimed to improve take own leave (TOL) rates within a Queensland emergency department by providing a culturally competent care pathway.MethodologyA mixed methods pre/post evaluation of the feasibility, acceptability and usability of the Deadly RED pathway for First Nations patients presenting to ED was performed. This pathway combined early welcome and information sharing, introduction of screening and follow up for patients who TOL and enhanced access to alternative community healthcare. Yarning circles facilitated co‐design of research protocols and tools while a purposefully designed research Yarn enhanced understanding of the ‘story’ of the people. Qualitative analysis of Yarns allowed deductive themes to be extracted. A Participatory Action Research (PAR) approach and Indigenous research methodology involving First Nations people in design, knowledge sharing and joint ownership of results was used.ResultsCommon themes from the 85 yarns included the negative impact of long waiting times and positive impact from wholistic care. Unique themes identified included interpretation of waiting room placement and paracetamol prescription as a dismissal. Knowledge dissemination from yarning drove improvements in communications and processes to promote treatment completion resulting in elimination of these themes in post implementation yarns. Eighteen patients who had TOL were included in the post implementation yarns, however only eight of these believed that their treatment was incomplete.ConclusionThe use of yarning for consumer engagement has allowed deeper understanding of the reasons for TOL in First Nations emergency patients. The reciprocal knowledge sharing has guided targeted improvements in wholistic emergency care and communication resulting in First Nations patients feeling their care is complete even when the ‘number’ reports otherwise.So What?Indigenous Research methodology including yarning with First Nations patients suggests alternative engagement methods to guide enhanced quality of care monitoring for ED presentations.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Community and Home Care

Reference25 articles.

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