2022
DOI: 10.1186/s12939-022-01701-9
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Co-designing an intervention to prevent rheumatic fever in Pacific People in South Auckland: a study protocol

Abstract: Background Rheumatic fever is an autoimmune condition that occurs in response to an untreated Group A Streptococcus throat or skin infection. Recurrent episodes of rheumatic fever can cause permanent damage to heart valves, heart failure and even death. Māori and Pacific people in Aotearoa New Zealand experience some of the highest rates globally, with Pacific children 80 times more likely to be hospitalised for rheumatic fever and Māori children 36 times more likely than non-Māori, non-Pacific… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Components of enhanced models of care will be codesigned and evaluated using a participatory approach to ensure issues are appropriately framed, solutions collaboratively developed and assessed, and recommendations for implementation agreed on 23 33. Consistent with similar codesign studies, our study design does not include a detailed description of an intervention to be developed and evaluated 34–36. While we describe below a framework for working with a broad range of participants and for supporting the development of the codesign process through a developmental evaluation approach, the improvements to existing models of care that we develop will be determined over the course of the project so as to enable Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people with type 2 diabetes, their families and health professionals to be genuinely engaged in their design, implementation, evaluation and dissemination.…”
Section: Methods and Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Components of enhanced models of care will be codesigned and evaluated using a participatory approach to ensure issues are appropriately framed, solutions collaboratively developed and assessed, and recommendations for implementation agreed on 23 33. Consistent with similar codesign studies, our study design does not include a detailed description of an intervention to be developed and evaluated 34–36. While we describe below a framework for working with a broad range of participants and for supporting the development of the codesign process through a developmental evaluation approach, the improvements to existing models of care that we develop will be determined over the course of the project so as to enable Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people with type 2 diabetes, their families and health professionals to be genuinely engaged in their design, implementation, evaluation and dissemination.…”
Section: Methods and Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…23 33 Consistent with similar codesign studies, our study design does not include a detailed description of an intervention to be developed and evaluated. [34][35][36] While we describe below a framework for working with a broad range of participants and for supporting the development of the codesign process through a developmental evaluation approach, the improvements to existing models of care that we develop will be determined over the course of the project so as to enable Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people with type 2 diabetes, their families and health professionals to be genuinely engaged in their design, implementation, evaluation and dissemination. Our approach requires the development of authentic ways of working through the centring of relationships between project participants, including researchers.…”
Section: Patient and Public Involvementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Locally codesigned health promotion materials that can be adapted and adopted by other communities for scale-up are needed. The benefit of this has been recently demonstrated in New Zealand39 40 and Australia 41…”
Section: Key Research Topic 2: Improve Diagnosis and Treatment Of Sup...mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Additionally, 288 cases of recurrent RF required re‐hospitalisation over the same period, accounting for 9.5% of the total RF hospitalisations per year (Bennett et al., 2021). In Aotearoa, NZ, RF diagnoses are inequitably distributed, occurring almost exclusively in Māori and Pacific populations (Tu'akoi et al., 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%