Monash Institute of Health Services Research, Monash University, Monash Medical Centre, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2009 Dec 15;9:235. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-9-235.
Evidence-based clinical practice guidelines support clinical decision-making by making recommendations to guide clinical practice. These recommendations are developed by integrating the expertise of a multidisciplinary group of clinicians with the perspectives of consumers and the best available research evidence. However studies have raised concerns about the quality of guideline development, and particularly the link between research and recommendations. The reasons why guideline developers are not following the established development methods are not clear.We aimed to explore the barriers to developing evidence-based guidelines in eleven hospitals in Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand, so as to better understand how evidence-based guideline development could be facilitated in these settings. The research aimed to identify the value clinicians place on guidelines, what clinicians want in guidelines developed in hospital settings and what factors limit rigorous evidence-based guideline development in these settings.
Semi-structured, face-to-face interviews were undertaken with senior and junior healthcare providers (nurses, midwives, doctors, allied health) from the maternal and neonatal services of the eleven participating hospitals. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed and a thematic analysis undertaken.
Ninety-three individual, 25 pair and eleven group interviews were conducted. Participants were clear that they want guidelines that are based on evidence and updated regularly. They were also clear that there are major barriers to this. Most of the barriers were shared across countries, and included lack of time, lack of skills in finding, appraising and interpreting evidence, lack of access to relevant evidence and difficulty arranging meetings and achieving consensus.Barriers that were primarily identified in Australian hospitals include cumbersome organisational processes and a feeling that guidelines are being developed for bureaucratic ends. Barriers that were primarily identified in South East Asian hospitals include difficulty accessing evidence due to limited resources available for computers, internet and journal subscriptions and limited skills in computing and English.
The clinicians in these eleven very different hospitals want evidence-based guidelines. However they are frustrated by guideline development processes that are enormously time, skill and resource intensive. They feel strongly that "there's got to be a better way".The fact that the great majority of the identified barriers were shared across settings may provide an opportunity to develop a more pragmatic way of developing guidelines that can be applied in many contexts.
循证临床实践指南通过提出建议来指导临床实践,为临床决策提供支持。这些建议是通过整合多学科临床医生的专业知识、消费者的观点以及最佳现有研究证据而制定的。然而,研究对指南制定的质量提出了担忧,特别是研究与建议之间的联系。指南制定者没有遵循既定的制定方法的原因尚不清楚。我们旨在探讨澳大利亚、印度尼西亚、马来西亚、菲律宾和泰国的 11 家医院制定基于证据的指南所面临的障碍,以便更好地了解如何在这些环境中促进循证指南的制定。该研究旨在确定临床医生对指南的重视程度、临床医生希望在医院环境中制定的指南内容以及在这些环境中限制严格循证指南制定的因素。
对来自 11 家参与医院的母婴服务部门的高级和初级医疗保健提供者(护士、助产士、医生、辅助医疗人员)进行了半结构化的面对面访谈。访谈进行了录音、转录和主题分析。
共进行了 93 次个人访谈、25 次双人访谈和 11 次小组访谈。参与者明确表示,他们希望指南是基于证据并定期更新的。他们也清楚地认识到,这存在重大障碍。大多数障碍在各国都存在,包括缺乏时间、缺乏查找、评估和解释证据的技能、缺乏相关证据以及安排会议和达成共识的困难。在澳大利亚医院中主要发现的障碍包括繁琐的组织流程和感觉指南是为官僚目的而制定的。在东南亚医院中主要发现的障碍包括由于计算机、互联网和期刊订阅的资源有限以及计算和英语技能有限,难以获取证据。
这 11 家非常不同的医院的临床医生都希望制定基于证据的指南。然而,他们对指南制定过程非常耗时、技能和资源密集型感到沮丧。他们强烈认为“必须有一种更好的方法”。在大多数情况下,确定的障碍在不同的环境中都存在,这可能为开发一种更实用的指南制定方法提供了机会,这种方法可以在许多情况下应用。