Ismael Martinez-Nicolas, Daniel Arnal-Velasco, Eva Romero-García, Neus Fabregas, Yolanda Sanduende Otero, Irene Leon, Ashish A Bartakke, Javier Silva-Garcia, Anna Rodriguez, Claudia Valli, Sandro Zamarian, Adam Zaludek, Jose Meneses-Echavez, Andrés F Loaiza-Betancur, Paulo Sousa, Carola Orrego, Victor Soria-Aledo
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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:手术相关事件是院内不良事件的常见原因。手术患者的安全将受益于循证实践,但仍缺乏全面的患者安全建议。本研究旨在汇编和评估成人围手术期患者安全建议。方法:采用Medline、Embase、Cochrane、Virtual Health Library Regional Portal和Trip Database对2012 - 2022年临床实践指南进行系统回顾。入选标准遵循PICAR策略,在围手术期护理连续性中提供患者安全建议。对指南的质量进行了评估,特别是对那些包含强烈建议的协议- ii工具的“开发严谨性”领域进行了重点评估。进行描述性分析,强调指南质量、推荐强度和证据支持水平。结果:从267条指南中提取围手术期患者安全建议4666条,其中强烈推荐2095条,占44.9%。其中,322项具有最高水平的证据,但只有18项指南符合协议- ii“发展的严谨性”领域的高标准。78项建议的子集在推荐强度、证据水平和指南制定的严谨性方面排名最高。入院前和出院后护理建议存在差距。讨论:本综述强调了指南在方学质量上值得注意的可变性,以及推荐强度和现有围手术期患者安全建议的证据水平之间的不一致。这些发现为建议政策决定和促进最佳实践以提高全球手术安全提供了有价值的信息。注册:普洛斯彼罗(CRD42022347449)。
Perioperative patient safety recommendations: systematic review of clinical practice guidelines.
Background: Surgical-related incidents are a common cause of in-hospital adverse events. Surgical patient safety would benefit from evidence-based practices, but a comprehensive collection of patient safety recommendations is still lacking. This study aimed to compile and assess the perioperative patient safety recommendations for adults.
Method: A systematic review of clinical practice guidelines was conducted using Medline, Embase, Cochrane, Virtual Health Library Regional Portal, and Trip Database from 2012 to 2022. Eligibility criteria followed a PICAR strategy for patient safety recommendations in the perioperative care continuum. Guidelines were appraised for quality, particularly focusing on the 'rigour of development' domain of the AGREE-II tool for those containing strong recommendations. Descriptive analyses were conducted, emphasizing guideline quality, recommendation strength, and the supporting level of evidence.
Results: From the 267 guidelines, 4666 perioperative patient safety recommendations were extracted, of which 44.9% (2095) were strongly recommended. Of these, 322 had the highest level of evidence, but only 18 guidelines met high standards in the AGREE-II 'rigour of development' domain. A subset of 78 recommendations ranked the highest in the strength of recommendation, level of evidence, and rigour of development of their guidelines. A gap was found within pre-admission and post-discharge care recommendations.
Discussion: This review highlights the noteworthy variability in the methodological quality of the guidelines, and a discordance between strength of recommendation and evidence level of the available perioperative patient safety recommendations. These findings provide valuable information for advising policy decisions and promoting best practices to enhance global surgical safety.