TY - JOUR T1 - Capturing the experiences of patients across multiple complex interventions: a meta-qualitative approach JF - BMJ Open JO - BMJ Open DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-007664 VL - 5 IS - 9 SP - e007664 AU - Fiona Webster AU - Jennifer Christian AU - Elizabeth Mansfield AU - Onil Bhattacharyya AU - Gillian Hawker AU - Wendy Levinson AU - Gary Naglie AU - Thuy-Nga Pham AU - Louise Rose AU - Michael Schull AU - Samir Sinha AU - Vicky Stergiopoulos AU - Ross Upshur AU - Lynn Wilson Y1 - 2015/09/01 UR - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/5/9/e007664.abstract N2 - Objectives The perspectives, needs and preferences of individuals with complex health and social needs can be overlooked in the design of healthcare interventions. This study was designed to provide new insights on patient perspectives drawing from the qualitative evaluation of 5 complex healthcare interventions.Setting Patients and their caregivers were recruited from 5 interventions based in primary, hospital and community care in Ontario, Canada.Participants We included 62 interviews from 44 patients and 18 non-clinical caregivers.Intervention Our team analysed the transcripts from 5 distinct projects. This approach to qualitative meta-evaluation identifies common issues described by a diverse group of patients, therefore providing potential insights into systems issues.Outcome measures This study is a secondary analysis of qualitative data; therefore, no outcome measures were identified.Results We identified 5 broad themes that capture the patients’ experience and highlight issues that might not be adequately addressed in complex interventions. In our study, we found that: (1) the emergency department is the unavoidable point of care; (2) patients and caregivers are part of complex and variable family systems; (3) non-medical issues mediate patients’ experiences of health and healthcare delivery; (4) the unanticipated consequences of complex healthcare interventions are often the most valuable; and (5) patient experiences are shaped by the healthcare discourses on medically complex patients.Conclusions Our findings suggest that key assumptions about patients that inform intervention design need to be made explicit in order to build capacity to better understand and support patients with multiple chronic diseases. Across many health systems internationally, multiple models are being implemented simultaneously that may have shared features and target similar patients, and a qualitative meta-evaluation approach, thus offers an opportunity for cumulative learning at a system level in addition to informing intervention design and modification. ER -