ALL Metrics
-
Views
-
Downloads
Get PDF
Get XML
Cite
Export
Track
Study Protocol
Revised

The perspectives of patients and their caregivers on self-management interventions for chronic conditions: a protocol for a mixed-methods overview

[version 2; peer review: 2 approved]
PUBLISHED 29 Nov 2021
Author details Author details
OPEN PEER REVIEW
REVIEWER STATUS

This article is included in the Health Services gateway.

Abstract

Introduction: Self-management (SM) interventions are complex interventions and one of the main components of high-quality chronic disease care for which the incorporation of the perspectives of patients and their informal caregivers is crucial. We aim to identify, appraise and synthesise the evidence exploring patients’ and caregivers’ perspectives on SM interventions. More precisely, we aim to 1) describe how they value the importance of outcomes of SM interventions, and 2) identify the factors that might impact on acceptability and feasibility of SM interventions based on their preferences and experiences.
Methods and analysis: We will conduct four mixed-methods overviews as part of COMPAR-EU, a European Union (EU) funded project aimed to identify the most effective and cost-effective SM interventions for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), heart failure (HF), obesity, and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). We will search in MEDLINE, CINAHL, and PsycINFO for systematic reviews of studies addressing patients’ preferences on outcomes, or their experiences with SM alongside their disease trajectory or with SM interventions, published in English. Selection of studies and data extraction will be conducted in pairs. We will assess the overlap of studies and methodological quality. We will follow a three-step synthesis process: 1) narrative synthesis for quantitative evidence, 2) thematic synthesis for qualitative evidence, and 3) integration of findings in the interpretation phase. Additionally, we will consult on the relevance of findings with patients and their caregivers.
Systematic review registration: PROSPERO CRD42019117867

Keywords

Systematic Review, Self-Management, Chronic Diseases, Mixed-Methods Research, Patient Preferences, Outcomes

Revised Amendments from Version 1

We thank reviewers for their comments on our manuscript. In this new version, we have included only minor amendments to the text.

See the authors' detailed response to the review by Milena Vainieri
See the authors' detailed response to the review by Edward Zimbudzi

Introduction

The global burden of chronic conditions constitutes a significant public health challenge that undermines social and economic development, accounting for almost 86% of deaths and 77% of the disease burden in the WHO European Region. The increasing healthcare demands of chronic conditions lead to the development of integrated healthcare models based on patient-centred care1.

Self-management (SM) interventions are critical components of high-quality patient-centred care in chronic conditions13. SM can be defined as what individuals, families, and communities do to promote, maintain, or restore health and to cope with the disease or disability with or without the support of health professionals. It includes, but is not limited to, self-prevention, self-diagnosis, self-medication, and daily management of the disease and its disabilities4. Ideally, SM interventions support patients taking their individual needs and their specific context into account5. SM interventions are complex and multifaceted and may contain multiple topics, formats, and components (e.g. participants, family, facilitators, or technology) that interact with each other. Different outcomes can be defined to measure their impact based on the specific scope (e.g. behavioural, psychosocial, physiological, or utilisation outcomes) of the intervention5,6.

An increasing body of evidence suggests that SM interventions have beneficial effects for patients with chronic conditions in terms of knowledge, the performance of SM behaviours, self-efficacy, health status7 and quality of life8. However, what might be beneficial for some patients might be less beneficial for others; for that reason, it is necessary to identify which elements of SM interventions are effective and under what circumstances. Especially, it is important to consider the perspectives of patients and their caregivers to get insight into their values and preferences on specific healthcare alternatives911.

Preference is conceived as the result of cognition, experience and reflection. Moreover, a specific preference is the consequence of what a person values12. In healthcare, patients’ preferences can be defined as the qualitative or quantitative assessments of the relative desirability or acceptability to patients of specified alternatives or choices among outcomes or other attributes that differ among alternative health interventions13.

The GRADE Evidence to Decision (EtD) framework is a decision-making tool that integrates the perspective of patients under the term values, defined as the relative importance of outcomes or health states of interest14. The patient’s preference for or against intervention is an implicit result of the relative importance of the health outcomes an individual connects to the intervention14. The patient’s preference is also implicitly related to other aspects such as attitudes, expectations and beliefs. These aspects often fall within two other EtD criteria: acceptability, whether interventions are acceptable for patients; and feasibility, whether interventions are feasible to implement from the patient’s point of view1315. However, the methods to identify, collect and integrate this body of evidence in healthcare decision-making is still an evolving research area10 which requires more practical guidance16,17.

One method to find out the perspectives of patients and their caregivers is the development of a systematic review (SR) of studies exploring how they value the importance of outcomes or the features of the interventions that might affect their benefit-risk perceptions. This information can be obtained from quantitative and qualitative evidence reported as utility or non-utility measures (Table 1)9,14,18. Utility measures reflect how a respondent values or feels about a state of health19. Non-utility measures inform about patients’ (or their informal caregivers’) preferences and experiences with the intervention of interest derived from quantitative, qualitative or mixed methods studies14.

Table 1. Methods to ascertain values and preferences.

MeasuresSource
/type of data
Method
Health utilitiesDirectMatching
-  Allocation game
-  Standard gamble
-  Time trade-off
-  Visual analogue scale
-  Willingness to pay
Conjoint analysis
-  Best-worst choice experiment
-  Binary choice experiments
-  Conjoint analysis
-  Full ranking exercise
-  Multinomial choice experiment
-  Probability trade-off
IndirectMulti-attribute utility instruments
-  EuroQoL-5D
-  Health Utilities Index 2S
-  Short-form-6D
-  PROMIS-29
Quality of life tools
-  EQ5D utility estimates from
St. George Respiratory Questionnaire
-  Others
Non-utilities (preferences
and experiences)
Quantitative-  Adaptive questioning
-  Direct choice
-  Ranking
-  Rating (e.g. numerical rating scales)
-  Survey
Qualitative-  Focus groups
-  Interviews

Adapted from Zhang et al.14

Since 2010, there has been an increasing number of qualitative evidence synthesis (QES) published exploring patients’ and their caregivers' experiences and perceptions regarding living with a chronic condition, some of these explicitly addressing the process of self-care20. There are also some SRs of studies exploring patients’ preferences quantitatively for different health states20.

However, summarising this body of evidence in a complete and comprehensible way for stakeholders might be challenging. In this context, the development of overviews might represent the most suitable option to summarise this broad and complex phenomenon. Previously published overviews addressing this research area were very diverse in the length and depth of scope2125. However, some focused more on SM interventions and included only qualitative evidence for some specific conditions, such as stroke24, rheumatic diseases, cancer and fibromyalgia21. Others explored the experience of living with a chronic condition using a quantitative22 or qualitative approaches23. Moreover, some were focused on some specific symptoms (e.g. chronic non-malignant pain25). Even though previous research had enhanced knowledge on the perspectives of patients and their caregivers on chronic conditions and SM, we consider it is required to move towards a more comprehensive approach, applying a mixed-methods approach26 including quantitative and qualitative sources of evidence, through developing overviews of systematic reviews.

Objectives

This study protocol is part of a large multi-method and multi-step project: “Comparing the cost-effectiveness of self-management interventions in four high priority chronic diseases in Europe: COMPAR-EU”. This is a European Union-funded project aiming to identify the most effective and cost-effective SM interventions for patients living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), heart failure (HF), obesity or type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).

Our main objective is to identify, appraise, and analyse the perspectives of patients and their caregivers on outcomes of SM interventions for the selected chronic conditions. To provide a more detailed assessment, we will conduct four overviews (one per chronic condition). Our specific objectives are 1) to explore how patients with one of the four chronic conditions, and their caregivers, value the importance of different outcomes of SM interventions, and 2) to identify the factors that might impact the acceptability and feasibility of SM interventions based on their preferences and experiences with SM through the disease trajectory and when taking part in SM interventions.

Methods and analysis

We will conduct four mixed-methods overviews of SRs according to the most updated methodological guidance from the Cochrane Collaboration2729, the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI)30 and key methodological references3134. We adhere to the applicable items of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses Protocols (PRISMA-P) statement35. We registered this protocol in the PROSPERO registry: CRD42019117867. Any amendment to the protocol and the supporting rationale will be reported.

Eligibility criteria

Type of reviews. We will consider for inclusion: 1) quantitative SRs 2) qualitative evidence syntheses QES; and 3) mixed methods research synthesis (MMRS). To be eligible for inclusion, the SRs should report as a minimum: 1) the search strategy for at least one database; 2) the list of included studies; and 3) the methods applied for synthesis36.

Context/setting. We will include SRs of studies without geographical restriction and will include all settings, except those confined to inpatient care.

Population/perspectives. We will limit inclusion to SRs of studies conducted in adult patients (18 or older) with one or more of the chronic conditions of interest (COPD, HF, obesity and T2DM), without restricting by disease severity. We will consider SRs assessing multiple chronic conditions (e.g., patients with more than one of the chronic conditions of interest or patients with chronic conditions of interest plus other chronic conditions) We will exclude SRs focused on patients with the chronic conditions of interest and cancer comorbidity or severe mental disorders. We will include SRs exploring the perspectives of patients or their informal caregivers. We will include SRs assessing both perspectives if these are reported separately. We will exclude SRs addressing only healthcare providers’ or healthy population perspectives.

The phenomenon of interest/intervention. We will include SRs aimed at exploring the perspectives of patients and their caregivers on the importance of outcomes of SM interventions. Their perspectives are based on their values, preferences and experiences. As described by Zhang et al.14, preferences for or against intervention are implicitly related to the relative importance people place (or value) on the expected or definite health outcomes connected to a specific intervention. We define SM intervention as supportive interventions systematically provided by healthcare staff, peers or laypersons to increase patients’ skills and confidence in their ability to manage a chronic condition. SM interventions aim to prepare patients (and, where appropriate, informal caregivers37) to actively participate in the management of their disease37,38.

We will apply the COMPAR-EU taxonomy for the domain of outcomes of SM interventions, with 35 elements categorised in seven subdomains39: 1) empowerment, 2) level of fulfilment of the expected SM behaviours, 3) clinical outcomes (progression of disease, complications, adverse events, and mortality), 4) quality of life of patients and caregivers, 5) perceptions and satisfaction with care, 6) health care use, and 7) cost. We will not exclude SRs addressing other outcomes not listed in the COMPAR-EU taxonomy. Instead, these will be incorporated as a new category if applicable.

Comparison. While not addressed as an objective in these overviews, if reported, we will consider usual care as the comparison.

Outcomes. We will include SRs evaluating studies reporting any of the following outcomes:

  • Utility measures for outcomes of SM interventions; defined as how patients or their caregivers value the importance of different outcomes. Utilities are measures of the value ascribed to states of health, most often scaled from “0”, representing death, to “1”, representing perfect health; they reflect the health-related quality of life of the individual at a particular point in time40. Methods to obtain utilities can be: a) direct methods such as matching methods (i.e. standard gamble, time trade-off, or rating scales), or conjoint analysis (i.e. discrete choice experiments, contingent valuation and willingness to pay, probability trade-off, paired comparison); or b) indirect methods with multi-attribute instruments like the EuroQual-5-dimension (EQ-5D), the Short Form-6-Dimension (SF-6D), Health Utilities Index (HUI-3)14, the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS-29)41, among other quality of life tools which transform results across several domains into utilities (Table 1).

  • Non-utility measures for outcomes of SM interventions, which are the result of the assessment of preferences and experiences of patients and their caregivers with SM in the disease trajectory or with SM interventions through quantitative (e.g. surveys), qualitative (e.g. interviews, focus groups), or mixed methods studies14 (Table 1).

Information sources and search strategy

We will design and execute a literature search strategy in MEDLINE (accessed through PubMed), the Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and PsycINFO. The leading search concepts will be: 1) the perspective of patients, for which we will include a sensitive content search strategy previously published42; and 2) specific terms for each chronic condition. We will apply methodological filters limiting to SRs, retrieving references using the filters available in each database, and to qualitative research, synthesis using non-controlled terms. We will consider English-language studies for inclusion without restriction on publication date. We will hand-search the reference list of overviews identified through our search strategy and conduct a forward citation search of the included studies in Scopus43. We will establish regular search update alerts. Studies identified through these alerts and meeting the eligibility criteria will be incorporated until the stakeholders’ consultation starts.

Selection of studies

We will manage references with Endnote X9. Pairs of authors will conduct the screening of references and selection of studies. After initial calibration with 10% of retrieved references, one author will independently select references to be included, and a second author will check the final list of included and excluded studies with reasons. Disagreements will be solved by discussion or with the help of a third author.

Data collection

We will extract data using Nvivo 12 Pro44. We will design and pilot-test one form for each type of SR (quantitative, qualitative or mixed methods). After initial calibration between pairs of authors, one author will extract data from the included reviews, and a second author will check the data against the full text for accuracy. We will solve disagreements by consensus or with the help of a third author. We will collect the following information from each type of SR:

  • General characteristics: country of contacting author, year of publication, aim or phenomenon of interest, search databases, search timeframe, the number of included studies, and the number of participants.

  • Methodological characteristics: the type of SR, the method of synthesis, methods of primary studies, the quality assessment tool, the certainty of the evidence assessment tool, and their findings.

  • Settings: location/s (countries) of primary studies, and the context of included studies.

  • Participants’ main characteristics: type of respondent, the severity of the disease, demographic characteristics, and comorbidities.

  • Intervention characteristics: target population/s, support technique/s, support delivery method/s, and expected patient (or caregiver) self-management behaviours.

  • Themes or findings related to outcomes of SM interventions: 1) quantitative data, including health utility measures (mean, standard deviation, confidence interval) and the methods applied to obtain them; and 2) qualitative data extraction, this process overlaps with the first stage of thematic synthesis (Figure 1).

db09c9c8-2cde-4355-9a1c-eb73b3e0966c_figure1.gif

Figure 1. Thematic synthesis stages and levels of interpretation.

Levels of interpretation: adapted from Pierce et al.24, thematic synthesis stages based on Thomas and Newman46.

In the extraction process, we will record the extent of relevant information not reported (e.g. information about age), but we will not take additional steps to get further information from primary studies29,45. For discrepant data (two or more SRs reporting different data for the same primary study), we will extract data from the SR with the highest methodological quality, and if similar methodological quality, from the review with the most updated search45. For discrepant methodological quality assessment (two or more SRs using different tools or reporting different results for the same primary study), we will report both results.

Assessment of overlapping primary studies

We will assess the overlapping primary studies (studies appearing in more than one review) using a citation matrix47. We will extract the references of the primary studies answering our research question within all selected reviews, calculate the “corrected covered area” (CCA), and describe the extent of overlap (slight [0 to 5], moderate [6 to 10], high [11 to 15], or very high [over 15])48. We will include all SRs that meet the eligibility criteria regardless of overlap49. We will conduct this assessment using Excel files.

For duplicated data (two or more SRs reporting the same data from the same primary study or with over 25% of overlap within primary studies), we will include data only once, selecting the one with the most complete and detailed data49.

Assessment of methodological quality of included systematic reviews

We will use the JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist for Systematic Reviews and Research Syntheses to test the quality of the included reviews30. The JBI Checklist, which comprises 11 items, is a tool to assess the methodological quality of both quantitative SRs and QES30. After initial calibration, one author will independently apply this checklist, and a second author will check results to validate scores. We will solve disagreements through consensus or with the help of a third author. We will adopt a previously published scoring method50 that allocates “one point” to positive responses and “zero points” to negative or unclear responses, and we will calculate the percentage of positive responses for each review (sum of positive responses divided by total items tested). The quality of each SR will be ranked based on the following criteria: 0–33% of criteria met (low quality), 34–66% of criteria met (medium quality), and 67% or more of criteria met (high quality)50. We will not exclude SRs based on their quality scores.

Data synthesis and reporting

To synthesise findings from selected SRs, we will use a mixed-methods three-step approach, with a convergent parallel analysis of quantitative and qualitative evidence51.

Step 1: Quantitative evidence. To analyse and synthesise quantitative findings (utility and non-utility data), we will use narrative synthesis52. We will calculate descriptive statistics (mean, SD for variables with a normal distribution and the median, interquartile range, for other distributions).

For reporting, we will present results in summarised tables (grouping by relevant categories of outcomes). We will plot reported results, e.g. mean values, 95% confidence intervals and I2 statistic for heterogeneity (if pooled), or the range of mean values or other measures (if not pooled) across SRs, the number of studies and the number of respondents for each outcome. Where possible we will present results by country of study, location, type of respondent (patient or caregiver), respondents’ characteristics (sample size, the severity of disease), and methods used. We will perform statistical analyses using STATA software V.1453.

Step 2: Qualitative evidence. We will analyse and synthesise qualitative data using a thematic synthesis46 approach using NVivo 12 Pro44. The levels of analysis will comprise second-order (primary studies) and third-order SRs constructs24,54 (Figure 1). We will not specify any a priori theme.

The synthesis process will follow the three stages of thematic synthesis46, the first two taking place concurrently: 1) text coding - line-by-line coding of the text of each SR; 2) developing descriptive themes; 3) re-interpretation and synthesis of this newly organised information, to produce analytical themes that go beyond the findings of the SRs authors (overview of SRs) (Figure 1). For this step, we will conduct a collaborative analysis with at least three review authors to consider alternative interpretations and ensure that fourth-order constructs remain grounded in the primary studies.

Step 3: Integration of qualitative and quantitative evidence. We will integrate the results of these two sources of evidence in the interpretation phase of results55. For findings informing outcomes, we will organise them according to the COMPAR-EU taxonomy (or to additional outcomes, if applicable)39. For emerging themes informing about feasibility and acceptability of SM interventions, we will develop a framework, according to the classification of analytical themes. The goal of the integration phase is to categorise the importance of outcomes and provide a framework to identify the factors that influence acceptability and feasibility of SM interventions, always from the perspectives of patients and their caregivers. We will present findings using tabular formats, which will inform the development of decision-making tools for the interactive platform of the COMPAR-EU project.

Sub-group analysis. For quantitative evidence and depending on the sufficiency of SRs, we plan to analyse the primary outcomes according to the patient population (e.g. age, the severity of the disease, number and types of chronic conditions, and type of respondent), intervention (e.g.,. type of SM intervention) and setting (e.g., country). For qualitative evidence, it is not possible to specify the groups in advance, due to the nature of this synthesis.

Sensitivity analysis. If applicable, we will conduct a sensitivity analysis exploring the impact of the quality of the included SRs (low, medium and high) in the final synthesis of findings.

Patient’s and caregiver’s involvement

After the integration of quantitative and qualitative findings, we will conduct an online survey with patients’ and caregivers’ representatives from each chronic condition. We will ask for their feedback on the draft of summaries of perspectives of patients and their caregivers derived from the SRs. We will design a tabular format for the seven subdomains of outcomes with close and open-ended questions assessing: 1) to what extent the overview findings resound with their preferences and experiences; and 2) the relevance of findings for healthcare decision-making on SM interventions from their point of view.

For the recruitment of participants, we will invite patients’ and caregivers’ representatives through the patient’s networks collaborating in the COMPAR-EU project. We aim to include at least five patients with different profiles of gender, age group, and severity of disease and one informal caregiver for each condition. After giving their informed consent, patients will receive the link to complete the survey. Their responses will be analysed based on frequencies, and thematic analysis for the open-ended questions. After discussion within the review working group, we will include their perspectives in the discussion section of each chronic condition manuscript.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethical approval was obtained by the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of the Avedis Donabedian Research Institute, the coordinator partner of the COMPAR-EU Project (EU 754936), the University Institute for Primary Care Research (IDIAP Jordi Gol) and was signed on March 2018. We will disseminate our findings as conference abstracts, peer-review manuscripts, and social community media. Patients’ and caregivers’ representatives participating in the draft summaries assessment will receive feedback based on their responses. Our results will inform the development of decision-making tools for the COMPAR-EU Project.

Study status

Since we planned to conduct the overviews of reviews for the four conditions consecutively, we are in different points on each one: 1) we conducted the searches in the selected databases and selected the initial list of included reviews for the four conditions on March 2019; 2) we finalised the extraction of the quantitative data of SRs reporting health utilities for the four conditions on September 2019, updated until November 2020; 3) we started the extraction of qualitative data, and thematic synthesis for reviews of T2DM on November 2019 and this process is still in progress; 4) in the upcoming months we will follow with obesity, HF and COPD. Finally, we plan to publish results also in a consecutive manner, one manuscript per condition, during the second semester of 2021 and the first of 2022.

Discussion

Our study will collect the perspectives of patients and their caregivers on SM interventions for four high priority chronic conditions. We will synthesise and integrate quantitative and qualitative findings describing how patients and their caregivers value the importance of outcomes of SM interventions, and the factors that might affect acceptability and feasibility of conducting these SM interventions, based on their preferences and experiences about SM, through the disease trajectory and with SM interventions.

To our knowledge, these will be the first overview of the perspectives of patients and their caregivers on SM interventions for any of these four chronic conditions using a mixed-methods approach26. We will follow the most updated methodological guidance for overviews2734.

Each overview will provide new knowledge in a summarised format about the perspectives of patients living with the four selected chronic conditions and their caregivers on SM interventions. This evidence will be readily available to inform decision-making tools (i.e. EtD frameworks and decisions aids) where, in addition to effectiveness and cost-effectiveness findings, the COMPAR-EU project will develop recommendations for SM interventions. More precisely, we will inform about the importance of outcomes of SM interventions, acceptability and feasibility considerations, through quantitative and qualitative data.

Although patients vary greatly in their preferences10, this approach will help to identify subgroups of patients (and caregivers) that might find an acceptable risk-benefit balance for SM interventions. We will also inform about acceptability and feasibility considerations for implementation concerns of these interventions. Our findings will be incorporated into the COMPAR-EU Project final product: an interactive platform that will be designed and adapted to different profiles of end-users, including patients, caregivers, healthcare providers, policymakers, researchers and industry representatives.

Some limitations include that our findings will represent a sample of primary studies published in English already included in SRs. Because of time constraints, we do not plan to update them32, so we may miss the most recent studies. Furthermore, we are not using a specific tool to assess the quality of reporting. Instead, we will describe this aspect as an overall assessment32. Finally, the overall assessment of the certainty of the evidence is out of our scope, since there is still scarce guidance on how to assess this aspect within an overview32.

Our findings will help to characterise better the perspective of patients with chronic conditions and their caregivers on SM interventions, identifying challenges patients face in their daily life, which may inform and help healthcare providers to get a deeper understanding the patients’ experiences and what is important for them. In this way, they will be able to provide support to patients that better fits their needs. For policy and decision-makers, being aware of the perspective of patients will help to design patient-centred strategies to implement SM interventions.

We expect our findings will provide valuable insights to be considered in the design and conduct of future studies of SM interventions for patients living with any of these or similar chronic conditions. These overviews will help to identify gaps in research in this field and areas of potentially redundant research, reducing waste and streamlining the use of limited resources.

Data availability

Underlying data

No underlying data are associated with this article.

Extended data

OSF: The perspectives of patients and their caregivers on self-management interventions for chronic conditions. https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/GFSA556

Reporting guidelines

OSF: The perspectives of patients and their caregivers on self-management interventions for chronic conditions. https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/GFSA556.

Data are available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC-BY 4.0).

Comments on this article Comments (0)

Version 2
VERSION 2 PUBLISHED 18 Feb 2020
Comment
Author details Author details
Competing interests
Grant information
Copyright
Download
 
Export To
metrics
Views Downloads
F1000Research - -
PubMed Central
Data from PMC are received and updated monthly.
- -
Citations
CITE
how to cite this article
Niño de Guzmán E, Martínez García L, González AI et al. The perspectives of patients and their caregivers on self-management interventions for chronic conditions: a protocol for a mixed-methods overview [version 2; peer review: 2 approved] F1000Research 2021, 9:120 (https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.22125.2)
NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article.
track
receive updates on this article
Track an article to receive email alerts on any updates to this article.

Open Peer Review

Current Reviewer Status: ?
Key to Reviewer Statuses VIEW
ApprovedThe paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested
Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit.
Not approvedFundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions
Version 2
VERSION 2
PUBLISHED 29 Nov 2021
Revised
Views
4
Cite
Reviewer Report 01 Dec 2021
Edward Zimbudzi, Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia 
Approved
VIEWS 4
The authors have ... Continue reading
CITE
CITE
HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT
Zimbudzi E. Reviewer Report For: The perspectives of patients and their caregivers on self-management interventions for chronic conditions: a protocol for a mixed-methods overview [version 2; peer review: 2 approved]. F1000Research 2021, 9:120 (https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.79074.r101464)
NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article.
Version 1
VERSION 1
PUBLISHED 18 Feb 2020
Views
16
Cite
Reviewer Report 02 Jun 2021
Edward Zimbudzi, Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia 
Approved with Reservations
VIEWS 16
In this protocol, the authors seek to identify, appraise and synthesise evidence regarding patients' and caregivers' perspectives on self-management interventions. To do this, the authors will conduct four mixed-methods overviews specific to patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), heart ... Continue reading
CITE
CITE
HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT
Zimbudzi E. Reviewer Report For: The perspectives of patients and their caregivers on self-management interventions for chronic conditions: a protocol for a mixed-methods overview [version 2; peer review: 2 approved]. F1000Research 2021, 9:120 (https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.24400.r84691)
NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article.
  • Author Response 29 Nov 2021
    Ena Niño de Guzman, Iberoamerican Cochrane Centre, Sant Pau Biomedical Research Institute (IIB-Sant Pau), Barcelona, 08025, Spain
    29 Nov 2021
    Author Response
    Eligibility criteria
    We will include SRs that included studies in patients with chronic conditions of interest (COPD, HF, obesity and T2DM) and without restricting by 1) disease severity, 2) the ... Continue reading
COMMENTS ON THIS REPORT
  • Author Response 29 Nov 2021
    Ena Niño de Guzman, Iberoamerican Cochrane Centre, Sant Pau Biomedical Research Institute (IIB-Sant Pau), Barcelona, 08025, Spain
    29 Nov 2021
    Author Response
    Eligibility criteria
    We will include SRs that included studies in patients with chronic conditions of interest (COPD, HF, obesity and T2DM) and without restricting by 1) disease severity, 2) the ... Continue reading
Views
16
Cite
Reviewer Report 24 Aug 2020
Milena Vainieri, Management and Health Laboratory, Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies of Pisa, Pisa, Italy 
Approved
VIEWS 16
The article presents the study protocol for a systematic review of the reviews dealing with 4 main chronic diseases.

The methods that this group of authors intend to apply are innovative and comprehensive.

The ... Continue reading
CITE
CITE
HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT
Vainieri M. Reviewer Report For: The perspectives of patients and their caregivers on self-management interventions for chronic conditions: a protocol for a mixed-methods overview [version 2; peer review: 2 approved]. F1000Research 2021, 9:120 (https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.24400.r66199)
NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article.
  • Author Response 29 Nov 2021
    Ena Niño de Guzman, Iberoamerican Cochrane Centre, Sant Pau Biomedical Research Institute (IIB-Sant Pau), Barcelona, 08025, Spain
    29 Nov 2021
    Author Response
    Comment 1: Language proofreading and publication plan
    Response 1
    We have reviewed English grammar correctness and made some minor edits. We plan to publish one overview per disease. We have ... Continue reading
COMMENTS ON THIS REPORT
  • Author Response 29 Nov 2021
    Ena Niño de Guzman, Iberoamerican Cochrane Centre, Sant Pau Biomedical Research Institute (IIB-Sant Pau), Barcelona, 08025, Spain
    29 Nov 2021
    Author Response
    Comment 1: Language proofreading and publication plan
    Response 1
    We have reviewed English grammar correctness and made some minor edits. We plan to publish one overview per disease. We have ... Continue reading

Comments on this article Comments (0)

Version 2
VERSION 2 PUBLISHED 18 Feb 2020
Comment
Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article:
Approved - the paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested
Approved with reservations - A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit.
Not approved - fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions
Sign In
If you've forgotten your password, please enter your email address below and we'll send you instructions on how to reset your password.

The email address should be the one you originally registered with F1000.

Email address not valid, please try again

You registered with F1000 via Google, so we cannot reset your password.

To sign in, please click here.

If you still need help with your Google account password, please click here.

You registered with F1000 via Facebook, so we cannot reset your password.

To sign in, please click here.

If you still need help with your Facebook account password, please click here.

Code not correct, please try again
Email us for further assistance.
Server error, please try again.