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Process and feasibility of implementing guideline recommendations for the care of osteoarthritis in West Africa

Babatunde, Opeyemi O; Adetunji, Oladapo; Alonge, Ibidunni; Owoyemi, Tolulope; Ayinmode, Ebunoluwa; Ogunbanjo, Adebimpe; White, Simon; Adebajo, Adewale; Mallen, Christian; Dziedzic, Krysia

Authors

Oladapo Adetunji

Ibidunni Alonge

Tolulope Owoyemi

Ebunoluwa Ayinmode

Adebimpe Ogunbanjo

Adewale Adebajo



Abstract

To assess the feasibility of a guideline-informed model of care for osteoarthritis in primary healthcare and community pharmacy settings in the West African context. The 4-phase mixed-methods programme of research undertaken in Southwest Nigeria, West Africa. Phases 1-2 involved contextual adaptation of guideline-informed care Joint Implementation of Guidelines for OSteoArthritis in West-Africa (JIGSAW-A): (1) focus groups (n=4) with patients, community pharmacists and healthcare professionals (HCPs) to identify patient preferences and support needs of HCPs; (2) stakeholders resource contextualisation/codesign (ie, osteoarthritis guidebook in local languages, HCPs training/support package). Iterative codesign workshops (n=3) using participatory approaches, model osteoarthritis consultation simulations and consensus agreement.Phase 3: following training and a 12-week pilot implementation period, patient-reported quality of care was assessed by the OsteoArthritis Quality Indicator questionnaire (modified 9-item scale 0%-100%, 100%=best), and implementation of the JIGSAW-A model of care was evaluated using the Reach-Effectiveness-Adoption-Implementation-Maintenance framework. Patient and HCP interviews explored barriers and facilitators, usefulness and acceptability. In phase 4, recommendations for further scale-up and wider implementation of integrated osteoarthritis care were specified. Phases 1-2 highlight the burden and impact of everyday living with joint pain and misinformation which affects help-seeking. Participants expressed the need for a broad information and education campaign and access to self-management support, which informed iterative contextualisation of osteoarthritis care and patient information resources used to support pilot implementation in phase 3.Over 12 weeks, 12 HCPs (community pharmacies, physiotherapists and doctors) were involved in evaluation across nine sites. Of 369 patient consultations that were reported, high rates of quality indicator achievement were found for self-management advice (97%), topical analgesic use (89%) and exercise recommendations (87%). Compliance with full patient assessment in line with the protocol was poor (17%). We found that evidence-based care for osteoarthritis, involving community pharmacies (as a usual first point of call) and other primary care clinicians, is feasible and may improve aspects of care in low-resource settings. Further research is needed to ascertain long-term sustainability and cost-effectiveness. [Abstract copyright: © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ Group.]

Citation

Babatunde, O. O., Adetunji, O., Alonge, I., Owoyemi, T., Ayinmode, E., Ogunbanjo, A., White, S., Adebajo, A., Mallen, C., & Dziedzic, K. (2025). Process and feasibility of implementing guideline recommendations for the care of osteoarthritis in West Africa. BMJ Global Health, 10(6), Article e018714. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2024-018714

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 13, 2025
Online Publication Date Jun 19, 2025
Publication Date Jun 19, 2025
Deposit Date Apr 16, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jun 19, 2025
Journal BMJ Global Health
Print ISSN 2059-7908
Electronic ISSN 2059-7908
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 10
Issue 6
Article Number e018714
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2024-018714
Keywords Middle Aged, Focus Groups, Infections, diseases, disorders, injuries, Female, Aged, Osteoarthritis - therapy, Global Health, Adult, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Health services research, Male, Nigeria, Primary Health Care, Treatment, Humans, Feasibility Studies
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/1196750
Publisher URL https://gh.bmj.com/content/10/6/e018714