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Using Nominal Group Technique to investigate the views of people with intellectual disabilities on end‐of‐life care provision
Author(s) -
TuffreyWijne Irene,
Bernal Jane,
Butler Gary,
Hollins Sheila,
Curfs Leopold
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2007.04227.x
Subject(s) - nominal group technique , intellectual disability , psychology , nominal group , voting , ranking (information retrieval) , end of life care , social psychology , nursing , medicine , palliative care , psychiatry , political science , computer science , law , linguistics , knowledge management , philosophy , machine learning , politics
Title. Using Nominal Group Technique to investigate the views of people with intellectual disabilities on end‐of‐life care provisionAim. This paper is a report of a study using the Nominal Group Technique as a method to elicit the views of people with intellectual disabilities on sensitive issues, in this example end‐of‐life care provision. Background. Establishing consumer views is essential in providing appropriate end‐of‐life care, yet people with intellectual disabilities have historically been excluded from giving their opinion and participating in research. Methods. Nominal Group Technique was used in three groups, with a total of 14 participants who had mild and moderate intellectual disabilities. This technique involves four steps: (1) silent generation of ideas, (2) round robin recording of ideas; (3) clarification of ideas and (4) ranking of ideas (voting). Participants were presented with an image of a terminally ill woman (Veronica), and were asked: ‘What do you think people could do to help Veronica?’ Findings. Participants generated a mean of nine individual responses. The highest rankings were given to issues around involvement in one's own care, presence of family and friends, offering activities to the ill person, and physical comfort measures. Conclusion. People with mild and moderate intellectual disabilities are capable of expressing their views on end‐of‐life care provision, and should be asked to do so. The Nominal Group Technique presents an effective and acceptable methodology in enabling people with intellectual disabilities to generate their views.