Lavis John, Davies Huw, Oxman Andy, Denis Jean-Louis, Golden-Biddle Karen, Ferlie Ewan
Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, Ontario, Canada.
J Health Serv Res Policy. 2005 Jul;10 Suppl 1:35-48. doi: 10.1258/1355819054308549.
To identify ways to improve the usefulness of systematic reviews for health care managers and policy-makers that could then be evaluated prospectively.
We systematically reviewed studies of decision-making by health care managers and policy-makers, conducted interviews with a purposive sample of them in Canada and the United Kingdom (n = 29), and reviewed the websites of research funders, producers/purveyors of research, and journals that include them among their target audiences (n = 45).
Our systematic review identified that factors such as interactions between researchers and health care policy-makers and timing/timeliness appear to increase the prospects for research use among policy-makers. Our interviews with health care managers and policy-makers suggest that they would benefit from having information that is relevant for decisions highlighted for them (e.g. contextual factors that affect a review's local applicability and information about the benefits, harms/risks and costs of interventions) and having reviews presented in a way that allows for rapid scanning for relevance and then graded entry (such as one page of take-home messages, a three-page executive summary and a 25-page report). Managers and policy-makers have mixed views about the helpfulness of recommendations. Our analysis of websites found that contextual factors were rarely highlighted, recommendations were often provided and graded entry formats were rarely used.
Researchers could help to ensure that the future flow of systematic reviews will better inform health care management and policy-making by involving health care managers and policy-makers in their production and better highlighting information that is relevant for decisions. Research funders could help to ensure that the global stock of systematic reviews will better inform health care management and policy-making by supporting and evaluating local adaptation processes such as developing and making available online more user-friendly 'front ends' for potentially relevant systematic reviews.
确定可改善系统评价对医疗保健管理人员和政策制定者有用性的方法,以便随后进行前瞻性评估。
我们系统地回顾了医疗保健管理人员和政策制定者的决策研究,对加拿大和英国的目标样本(n = 29)进行了访谈,并审查了研究资助者、研究生产者/提供者以及将医疗保健管理人员和政策制定者作为目标受众的期刊的网站(n = 45)。
我们的系统评价发现,研究人员与医疗保健政策制定者之间的互动以及时间安排/及时性等因素似乎会增加政策制定者使用研究成果的可能性。我们对医疗保健管理人员和政策制定者的访谈表明,他们将受益于获得与为他们突出显示的决策相关的信息(例如影响评价在当地适用性的背景因素以及有关干预措施的益处、危害/风险和成本的信息),以及以允许快速扫描相关性然后分级进入的方式呈现评价(例如一页的关键信息、三页的执行摘要和二十五页的报告)。管理人员和政策制定者对建议的有用性看法不一。我们对网站的分析发现,背景因素很少被突出显示,经常提供建议,很少使用分级进入格式。
研究人员可以通过让医疗保健管理人员和政策制定者参与系统评价的制作,并更好地突出与决策相关的信息,来帮助确保未来系统评价的流通能更好地为医疗保健管理和政策制定提供信息。研究资助者可以通过支持和评估当地的调整过程,例如开发并在线提供更便于用户使用的潜在相关系统评价的“前端”,来帮助确保全球系统评价的存量能更好地为医疗保健管理和政策制定提供信息。