Title:
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MINDSETPLUS: THE 'MANAGEMENT AND INFORMATION DECISION SUPPORT EPILEPSY TOOL' TO PROMOTE ASSESSMENT, GOAL-BASED SKILLS TRAINING, AND SERVICE LINKAGE FOR PEOPLE WITH EPILEPSY |
Author(s):
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Ross Shegog, Refugio Sepulveda, Katarzyna Czerniak, Rosalia Guerrero, Alejandra Garcia-Quintana, Robert Addy, Kimberly Martin, Latasha Jackson and David Labiner |
ISBN:
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978-989-8704-40-5 |
Editors:
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Piet Kommers and Mário Macedo |
Year:
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2022 |
Edition:
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Single |
Keywords:
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Epilepsy, eHealth, Self-Management, Community Health Workers, Chronic Disease, Decision Support |
Type:
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Short Paper |
First Page:
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274 |
Last Page:
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278 |
Language:
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English |
Cover:
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Full Contents:
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click to dowload
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Paper Abstract:
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Introduction: People with epilepsy can adhere to epilepsy self-management behaviors to improve seizure control, medication adherence, and lifestyle factors that contribute to seizures. Responsive online interventions can assist patients and providers to assess self-management, set treatment goals, and decide on education and social service programs. The Management Information & Decision Support Epilepsy Tool (MINDSET) is a bilingual online program designed to improve patient-provider communication to enhance epilepsy self-management. MINDSET may have utility for community health workers when assisting patients to improve their self-management. Purpose: To enhance MINDSET to include recommendations for education and social service programs ('MINDSETPlus') and to establish an implementation framework to facilitate use of MINDSETPlus by community health workers in community-based neurology clinics. Methods: An expert advisory group, comprising stakeholders from the Epilepsy Foundations in Texas and the Universities of Texas and Arizona provided formative review and consensus on MINDSET enhancements. Implementation theory and expert consensus informed a phased implementation framework. Results: MINDSETPlus enables patients to assess their self-management, select behavioral goals (for seizure, medication and lifestyle management), receive recommendations for further training tailored on current self-management and/or co-morbidities (depression and memory), and cue their community health worker to priority social determinants. A phased framework was derived for onboarding, training and implementing the MINDSETPlus-mediated intervention in neurology clinics. Conclusion: MINDSETPlus provides decision support for community health workers that may improve fidelity and metrics for quality improvement and assist to navigate, assess, reinforce, educate, and link epilepsy patients to community programs and services. Feasibility and efficacy testing of the intervention is in progress. |
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