Goldfrad C, Vella K, Bion J F, Rowan K M, Black N A
Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre, London, UK.
Intensive Care Med. 2000 Oct;26(10):1480-8. doi: 10.1007/s001340000628.
To establish priorities for research in critical care medicine in the UK using survey and nominal group (NG) techniques.
The senior doctor and nurse from 325 intensive care units (ICUs) in the UK were invited to contribute up to ten research questions relevant to intensive care organisation, practice or outcomes. These were then ranked twice using a Likert scale by a panel (nominal group) consisting of ten doctors (two trainees) and two nurses from university teaching and district general (community) hospitals. The first ratings were performed privately, and the second after group discussion. Thirty questions, ten each with strong, moderate or weak support, were then returned for rating by the originating ICU staff and the results compared with those of the NG.
One hundred eighty-five respondents (35.6 % university teaching, 62.1% district general, 2.3 % not stated) provided 811 questions of which 722 were research hypotheses. The most frequently identified topics were the evaluation of high dependency care, ICU characteristics, treatments for acute lung injury and acute renal failure, nurse:patient ratios, pulmonary artery catheterisation, aspects of medical and nursing practice, protocol evaluation, and interhospital transfers. These were condensed into 100 topics for consideration by the NG. Discussion and re-rating by the group resulted in strong support being offered for 37 topics, moderate support for 48, and weak support for 21. Following circulation of ten questions from each category, nine questions achieved strong support from both ICU staff and the NG. These were the effect on outcomes from critical illness of early intervention, high dependency care, nurse:patient ratios, interhospital transfers, early enteral feeding, optimisation of perioperative care, hospital type, regionalisation of paediatric intensive care and the use of pulmonary artery catheters. The absence of any questions relating to interventions targetting mediators of the immuno-inflammatory response could be a consequence of the failure of recent studies in sepsis to demonstrate benefits in outcome.
The intensive care community in the UK appears to prioritise research into organisational aspects of clinical practice and practical aspects of organ-system support. Health services research and the biological sciences need to develop collaborative methods for evaluating interventions and outcomes.
运用调查和名义群体(NG)技术确定英国重症监护医学的研究重点。
邀请英国325个重症监护病房(ICU)的高级医生和护士提出多达10个与重症监护组织、实践或结果相关的研究问题。然后,由来自大学教学医院和地区综合(社区)医院的10名医生(2名实习医生)和2名护士组成的小组(名义群体)使用李克特量表对这些问题进行两次排序。第一次评分是私下进行的,第二次是在小组讨论后进行的。然后将30个问题(每个类别各10个,分别获得强烈、中等或微弱支持)返回给最初提出问题的ICU工作人员进行评分,并将结果与名义群体的结果进行比较。
185名受访者(35.6%来自大学教学医院,62.1%来自地区综合医院,2.3%未说明)提出了811个问题,其中722个是研究假设。最常被提及的主题包括对高依赖护理的评估、ICU特征、急性肺损伤和急性肾衰竭的治疗、护士与患者比例、肺动脉导管插入术、医疗和护理实践方面、方案评估以及医院间转运。这些主题被浓缩为100个供名义群体考虑的主题。小组讨论和重新评分后,37个主题获得强烈支持,48个获得中等支持,21个获得微弱支持。在每个类别中分发10个问题后,9个问题获得了ICU工作人员和名义群体的强烈支持。这些问题包括早期干预、高依赖护理、护士与患者比例、医院间转运、早期肠内喂养、围手术期护理优化、医院类型、儿科重症监护区域化以及肺动脉导管使用对危重病结局的影响。缺乏与针对免疫炎症反应介质的干预措施相关的问题,可能是近期脓毒症研究未能证明对结局有益的结果。
英国重症监护领域似乎将临床实践的组织方面和器官系统支持的实际方面的研究列为优先事项。卫生服务研究和生物科学需要开发协作方法来评估干预措施和结局。