KEMRI Centre for Geographic Medicine Research - Coast, KEMRI/Wellcome Trust Programme, PO Box 43640, Nairobi, Kenya.
Implement Sci. 2009 Jul 23;4:44. doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-4-44.
Although considerable efforts are directed at developing international guidelines to improve clinical management in low-income settings they appear to influence practice rarely. This study aimed to explore barriers to guideline implementation in the early phase of an intervention study in four district hospitals in Kenya.
We developed a simple interview guide based on a simple characterisation of the intervention informed by review of major theories on barriers to uptake of guidelines. In-depth interviews, non-participatory observation, and informal discussions were then used to explore perceived barriers to guideline introduction and general improvements in paediatric and newborn care. Data were collected four to five months after in-service training in the hospitals. Data were transcribed, themes explored, and revised in two rounds of coding and analysis using NVivo 7 software, subjected to a layered analysis, reviewed, and revised after discussion with four hospital staff who acted as within-hospital facilitators.
A total of 29 health workers were interviewed. Ten major themes preventing guideline uptake were identified: incomplete training coverage; inadequacies in local standard setting and leadership; lack of recognition and appreciation of good work; poor communication and teamwork; organizational constraints and limited resources; counterproductive health worker norms; absence of perceived benefits linked to adoption of new practices; difficulties accepting change; lack of motivation; and conflicting attitudes and beliefs.
While the barriers identified are broadly similar in theme to those reported from high-income settings, their specific nature often differs. For example, at an institutional level there is an almost complete lack of systems to introduce or reinforce guidelines, poor teamwork across different cadres of health worker, and failure to confront poor practice. At an individual level, lack of interest in the evidence supporting guidelines, feelings that they erode professionalism, and expectations that people should be paid to change practice threaten successful implementation.
尽管在制定国际指南方面投入了相当大的努力,以改善低收入环境中的临床管理,但这些指南似乎很少能影响实践。本研究旨在探索肯尼亚四家地区医院的干预研究早期阶段实施指南的障碍。
我们根据干预措施的简单特征,基于对影响指南采用的主要理论的回顾,制定了一个简单的访谈指南。然后,采用深入访谈、非参与性观察和非正式讨论来探索引入指南和普遍改善儿科和新生儿护理方面的感知障碍。数据是在医院接受在职培训后的四到五个月收集的。数据被转录,主题被探索,使用 NVivo 7 软件进行两轮编码和分析,并进行分层分析,在与作为医院内部促进者的四名医院工作人员讨论后进行审查和修订。
共访谈了 29 名卫生工作者。确定了 10 个防止采用指南的主要主题:培训覆盖面不完整;地方标准制定和领导力不足;缺乏对良好工作的认可和赞赏;沟通和团队合作不佳;组织限制和资源有限;适得其反的卫生工作者规范;缺乏采用新实践的感知收益;难以接受变革;缺乏动力;以及相互矛盾的态度和信念。
虽然确定的障碍在主题上与高收入环境中报告的障碍大致相似,但它们的具体性质往往不同。例如,在机构层面,几乎完全缺乏引入或加强指南的系统,不同卫生工作者阶层之间的团队合作不佳,以及未能应对不良实践。在个人层面,对支持指南的证据缺乏兴趣、认为指南损害了专业性以及期望人们应该因改变实践而获得报酬,这些都威胁到成功实施。