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  3. Developing, Implementing, and Evaluating a Care Management Model for Patients With Neuromuscular Diseases: Protocol for a Participatory Mixed Methods Study.
 

Developing, Implementing, and Evaluating a Care Management Model for Patients With Neuromuscular Diseases: Protocol for a Participatory Mixed Methods Study.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/96061
Publisher DOI
10.2196/82833
PubMed ID
41734375
Description
Background
Neuromuscular diseases (NMDs) are often progressive conditions that can reduce quality of life and life expectancy and require long-term caregiving. As patients age, caregivers face increasing demands, often resulting in significant caregiver burden. Treatment and care are complex, and a coordinated, family-centered approach is indicated. The current care situation for individuals with NMDs and their families in Switzerland is poorly understood, and there is no standardized NMD care management available.
Objective
The proposed study aims to assess the current care practices for individuals with NMDs in Switzerland, identifying unmet needs and challenges faced by patients, families, and health care providers. On the basis of these findings, a care management model will be developed, implemented, and evaluated to enhance support structures, strengthen specialized neuromuscular centers, and improve overall health care outcomes for affected individuals and their families.
Methods
We planned a 3-phase participatory mixed methods study (the Care-NMD-CH study). First, qualitative descriptive data and quantitative survey data were used to assess the current state of care practices. Then, a care management model and training program were codeveloped based on these insights. Finally, the care management service was implemented in pilot specialized neuromuscular centers and evaluated using quantitative, qualitative, and integrated methods. In addition to interview data and patient records, we measured patient-reported outcomes (quality of life and self-efficacy), family-reported outcomes (family functioning and caregiver burden), and stakeholder-reported outcomes (quality of care and interprofessional collaboration). The study population comprises individuals with NMDs and their families living in Switzerland.
Results
Ethics approval was obtained in 2020. Baseline data (T0) were collected and analyzed in 2021 (phase A). The NMD care management model (phase B) was developed based on these data and finalized in 2022. Following the start of implementation in 8 centers in 2023, data collection for process and outcome evaluation (T1-T4) commenced and was completed in May 2025. Data analysis is currently ongoing, and results will be published separately. This paper reports only the study protocol.
Conclusions
This study represents an important step toward implementing and evaluating an evidence-based, family-centered care management service for individuals with NMDs and their families in specialized neuromuscular centers. Building on a 3-phase approach, the project identified gaps in current care; developed a structured care management model, including training; and evaluated its impact on patients, family members, and interprofessional care teams. Expected outcomes include possible improvements in the areas of care coordination, quality of life, and self-efficacy and family functioning. In addition, potential alleviation of disease and caregiver burden, as well as reduction in health care costs for those affected and the health system, will be investigated.
International Registered Report Identifier (irrid)
DERR1-10.2196/82833.
Date of Publication
2026
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
Switzerland
•
care management
•
caregiver burden
•
caregivers
•
mixed methods
•
neuromuscular diseases
•
quality of life
•
rare diseases
•
study protocol
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Waldboth, Veronika
Schuler, Christina
Willmann, Raffaella
Petry, Heidi
Weber, Markus
Grädel Messerli, Barbara
Hediger, Hannele
Kramer, Iris
Stettler-Nemecek, Gabriela
Knoblauch, Martin
Stettner, Georg Martin
Additional Credits
Department of Paediatrics
Series
JMIR Research Protocols
Publisher
JMIR Publications
ISSN
1929-0748
Access(Rights)
open.access
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