Heaney David, Black Corri, O'donnell Catherine A, Stark Cameron, van Teijlingen Edwin
Centre for Rural Health, University of Aberdeen, The Green House, Beechwood Business Park, Inverness IV2 2BL, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2006 Dec 21;6:309. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-6-309.
Recent developments within the United Kingdom's (UK) health care system have re-awakened interest in community hospitals (CHs) and their role in the provision of health care. This integrative literature review sought to identify and assess the current evidence base for CHs.
A range of electronic reference databases were searched from January 1984 to either December 2004 or February 2005: Medline, Embase, Web of Knowledge, BNI, CINAHL, HMIC, ASSIA, PsychInfo, SIGLE, Dissertation Abstracts, Cochrane Library, Kings Fund website, using both keywords and text words. Thematic analysis identified recurrent themes across the literature; narrative analyses were written for each theme, identifying unifying concepts and discrepant issues.
The search strategy identified over 16,000 international references. We included papers of any study design focussing on hospitals in which care was led principally by general practitioners or nurses. Papers from developing countries were excluded. A review of titles revealed 641 potentially relevant references; abstract appraisal identified 161 references for review. During data extraction, a further 48 papers were excluded, leaving 113 papers in the final review. The most common methodological approaches were cross-sectional/descriptive studies, commentaries and expert opinion. There were few experimental studies, systematic reviews, economic studies or studies that reported on longer-term outcomes. The key themes identified were origin and location of CHs; their place in the continuum of care; services provided; effectiveness, efficiency and equity of CHs; and views of patients and staff. In general, there was a lack of robust evidence for the role of CHs, which is partly due to the ad hoc nature of their development and lack of clear strategic vision for their future. Evidence for the effectiveness and efficiency of the services provided was limited. Most people admitted to CHs appeared to be older, suggesting that admittance to CHs was age-related rather than condition-related.
Overall the literature surveyed was long on opinion and short of robust studies on CHs. While lack of evidence on CHs does not imply lack of effect, there is an urgent need to develop a research agenda that addresses the key issues of health care delivery in the CH setting.
英国医疗保健系统的近期发展重新唤起了人们对社区医院及其在提供医疗保健方面作用的兴趣。本整合文献综述旨在识别和评估社区医院目前的证据基础。
从1984年1月至2004年12月或2005年2月检索了一系列电子参考文献数据库:医学索引(Medline)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)、科学网(Web of Knowledge)、英国国家书目数据库(BNI)、护理学与健康照护数据库(CINAHL)、英国健康管理与信息中心数据库(HMIC)、应用社会科学索引与摘要数据库(ASSIA)、心理学文摘数据库(PsychInfo)、欧洲灰色文献信息资源库(SIGLE)、学位论文摘要数据库、考科蓝图书馆、国王基金网站,使用关键词和文本词进行检索。主题分析确定了文献中反复出现的主题;针对每个主题撰写了叙述性分析,确定了统一概念和存在差异的问题。
检索策略识别出超过16000篇国际参考文献。我们纳入了任何研究设计的论文,这些论文聚焦于主要由全科医生或护士主导护理的医院。排除了来自发展中国家的论文。对标题的审查显示有641篇潜在相关参考文献;摘要评估确定了161篇参考文献进行审查。在数据提取过程中,又排除了48篇论文,最终审查中留下113篇论文。最常见的方法学方法是横断面/描述性研究、评论和专家意见。实验研究、系统评价、经济学研究或报告长期结果的研究很少。确定的关键主题包括社区医院的起源和位置;它们在连续护理中的地位;提供的服务;社区医院的有效性、效率和公平性;以及患者和工作人员的看法。总体而言,缺乏关于社区医院作用的有力证据,部分原因是其发展的临时性以及对其未来缺乏明确的战略愿景。所提供服务的有效性和效率的证据有限。大多数入住社区医院的人似乎年龄较大,这表明入住社区医院与年龄相关而非与病情相关。
总体而言,所调查的文献意见众多,但缺乏关于社区医院的有力研究。虽然缺乏关于社区医院的证据并不意味着没有效果,但迫切需要制定一个研究议程,以解决社区医院环境中医疗保健提供的关键问题。