Health Care Transition Outcomes in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Multinational Delphi Study

Author:

van den Brink Gertrude1ORCID,van Gaalen Martha A C1,de Ridder Lissy1,van der Woude C Janneke2,Escher Johanna C1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Paediatric Gastroenterology, Erasmus MC-Sophia Children’s Hospital, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

2. Department of Gastroenterology, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Background Transition programmes are designed to prepare adolescent inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] patients for transfer to adult care. It is still unclear which outcome parameters define ‘successful transition’. Therefore, this study aimed to identify outcomes important for success of transition in IBD. Methods A multinational Delphi study in patients, IBD nurses, and paediatric and adult gastroenterologists was conducted. In stage 1, panellists commented on an outcome list. In stage 2, the refined list was graded from 1 to 9 [least to very important], by an expert and a patient panel. In stage 3, the expert panel ranked important outcomes from 1 to 10 [least to most important]. Descriptive statistics and Mann–Whitney U-tests were performed. Results The final item list developed in stage 1 was tested by the expert [n = 74 participants, 52.7% paediatric] and patient panel [n = 61, aged 16–25 years, 49.2% male]. Respectively, ten and 11 items were found to be important by the expert and patient panel. Both panels agreed on eight of these items, of which six reflected self-management skills. In stage 3, the expert panel formed a top-ten list. The three most important items were: decision-making regarding IBD [mean score 6.7], independent communication [mean score 6.3] and patient satisfaction [mean score 5.8]. Conclusion This is the first study identifying outcomes that IBD healthcare providers and patients deem important factors for successful transition. Self-management skills were considered more important than IBD-specific items. This is a first step to further define success of transition in IBD and subsequently evaluate the efficacy of different transition models.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Gastroenterology,General Medicine

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