质量改进协作在改善卒中护理方面的有效性及其实施的促进因素和障碍:一项系统综述。

Hayley J Lowther, Joanna Harrison, James E Hill, Nicola J Gaskins, Kimberly C Lazo, Andrew J Clegg, Louise A Connell, Hilary Garrett, Josephine M E Gibson, Catherine E Lightbody, Caroline L Watkins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:为了成功地减少卒中的负面影响,需要在整个卒中护理途径中提供高质量的健康和护理实践。这些实践并不总是跨组织共享。质素改善协作团为来自不同机构的主要持份者提供一个独特的机会,让他们分享、学习和“带回家”最佳实践范例,以支持本地的质素改善工作。本系统综述评估了QICs在改善卒中护理方面的有效性,并探讨了实施该方法的促进因素和障碍。方法:检索截至2020年6月的5个电子数据库(MEDLINE、CINAHL、EMBASE、PsycINFO和Cochrane Library),筛选纳入研究的参考文献列表和相关综述。在成人中风护理环境中进行的研究,包括参与QIC的多专业中风团队。数据由一名审稿人提取,另一名审稿人检查。为了提高整体效率,采用了点票方法。提取了有关促进因素和障碍的数据,并将其映射到实施研究综合框架(CFIR)。结果:纳入了20篇描述脑卒中护理中使用的12个QICs的论文。QICs在其设置、部分卒中护理途径和改善重点方面各不相同。QIC参与与临床过程的改善有关,但对患者和其他结果的改善有限。关键的促进因素是组织内部和组织内部的网络、反馈机制、领导参与和获得最佳实践实例。主要障碍是QIC活跃期间的结构变化,缺乏组织支持或QIC活动的优先级,以及参与QIC活动的时间和资源不足。很少考虑病人和护理人员的参与以及保健不平等。结论:QICs与改善脑卒中护理的临床过程有关;然而,它们的短期性质意味着它们是否有益于患者的预后仍然存在不确定性。关于使用QIC来实现中风系统级改变的证据是模棱两可的。QIC的实施可能受到个人和组织层面因素的影响,未来使用QIC改善脑卒中护理的努力应由确定的促进因素和障碍来决定。未来的研究需要探索当QIC支持被撤销时,改善的可持续性。试验注册:在PROSPERO上注册的协议(CRD42020193966)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The effectiveness of quality improvement collaboratives in improving stroke care and the facilitators and barriers to their implementation: a systematic review.

The effectiveness of quality improvement collaboratives in improving stroke care and the facilitators and barriers to their implementation: a systematic review.

Background: To successfully reduce the negative impacts of stroke, high-quality health and care practices are needed across the entire stroke care pathway. These practices are not always shared across organisations. Quality improvement collaboratives (QICs) offer a unique opportunity for key stakeholders from different organisations to share, learn and 'take home' best practice examples, to support local improvement efforts. This systematic review assessed the effectiveness of QICs in improving stroke care and explored the facilitators and barriers to implementing this approach.

Methods: Five electronic databases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and Cochrane Library) were searched up to June 2020, and reference lists of included studies and relevant reviews were screened. Studies conducted in an adult stroke care setting, which involved multi-professional stroke teams participating in a QIC, were included. Data was extracted by one reviewer and checked by a second. For overall effectiveness, a vote-counting method was used. Data regarding facilitators and barriers was extracted and mapped to the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR).

Results: Twenty papers describing twelve QICs used in stroke care were included. QICs varied in their setting, part of the stroke care pathway, and their improvement focus. QIC participation was associated with improvements in clinical processes, but improvements in patient and other outcomes were limited. Key facilitators were inter- and intra-organisational networking, feedback mechanisms, leadership engagement, and access to best practice examples. Key barriers were structural changes during the QIC's active period, lack of organisational support or prioritisation of QIC activities, and insufficient time and resources to participate in QIC activities. Patient and carer involvement, and health inequalities, were rarely considered.

Conclusions: QICs are associated with improving clinical processes in stroke care; however, their short-term nature means uncertainty remains as to whether they benefit patient outcomes. Evidence around using a QIC to achieve system-level change in stroke is equivocal. QIC implementation can be influenced by individual and organisational level factors, and future efforts to improve stroke care using a QIC should be informed by the facilitators and barriers identified. Future research is needed to explore the sustainability of improvements when QIC support is withdrawn.

Trial registration: Protocol registered on PROSPERO ( CRD42020193966 ).

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