Stelfox Henry Thomas, Bobranska-Artiuch Barbara, Nathens Avery, Straus Sharon E
Department of Critical Care Medicine, Foothills Medical Centre, University of Calgary, 1403-29 St. NW, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Arch Surg. 2010 Mar;145(3):286-95. doi: 10.1001/archsurg.2009.289.
To systematically review the literature on quality indicators (QIs) for evaluating trauma care, identify QIs, map their definitions, and examine the evidence base in support of the QIs.
We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials from the earliest available date through January 14, 2009. To increase the sensitivity of the search, we also searched the grey literature and select journals by hand, reviewed reference lists to identify additional studies, and contacted experts in the field.
We selected all articles that identified or proposed 1 or more QIs to evaluate the quality of care delivered to patients with major traumatic injuries. Minimum inclusion criteria were a description of 1 or more QIs designed to evaluate patients with major traumatic injuries (defined as multisystem injuries resulting in hospitalization or death) and focused on prehospital care, hospital care, posthospital care, or secondary injury prevention.
The literature search identified 6869 citations. Review of abstracts led to the retrieval of 538 full-text articles for assessment, of which 192 articles were selected for review. Of these, 128 (66.7%) articles were original research, predominantly trauma database case series (57 [29.7%]) and cohort studies (55 [28.6%]), whereas 37 (19.3%) were narrative reviews and 8 (4.2%) were guidelines. A total of 1572 QIs in trauma care were identified and classified into 8 categories: non-American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma (ACS-COT) audit filters (42.0%), ACS-COT audit filters (19.1%), patient safety indicators (13.2%), trauma center/system criteria (10.2%), indicators measuring or benchmarking outcomes of care (7.4%), peer review (5.5%), general audit measures (1.8%), and guideline availability or adherence (0.8%). Measures of prehospital and hospital processes (60.4%) and outcomes (22.8%) were the most common QIs identified. Posthospital and secondary injury prevention QIs accounted for less than 5% of QIs.
Many QIs for evaluating the quality of trauma care have been proposed, but the evidence to support these indicators is not strong. Practical recommendations to select QIs to measure the quality of trauma care will require systematic reviews of identified candidate indicators and empirical studies to fill the knowledge gaps for postacute QIs.
系统回顾有关评估创伤护理质量指标(QIs)的文献,识别质量指标,梳理其定义,并审视支持这些质量指标的证据基础。
我们检索了MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、Cochrane系统评价数据库、Cochrane疗效评价摘要数据库以及Cochrane对照试验中心注册库,检索时间从各数据库最早收录日期至2009年1月14日。为提高检索的敏感性,我们还手工检索了灰色文献并挑选了一些期刊,查阅参考文献列表以识别其他研究,并联系了该领域的专家。
我们选取了所有识别或提出1个或更多质量指标以评估重度创伤患者所接受护理质量的文章。最低纳入标准为对1个或更多旨在评估重度创伤患者(定义为导致住院或死亡的多系统损伤)的质量指标进行描述,且重点关注院前护理、院内护理、院后护理或继发性损伤预防。
文献检索共识别出6869条引文。摘要回顾后检索出538篇全文文章进行评估,其中192篇文章被选作综述。在这些文章中,128篇(66.7%)为原创研究,主要是创伤数据库病例系列(57篇[29.7%])和队列研究(55篇[28.6%]),而37篇(19.3%)为叙述性综述,8篇(4.2%)为指南。共识别出1572个创伤护理质量指标,并分为8类:非美国外科医师学会创伤委员会(ACS - COT)审核筛选指标(42.0%)、ACS - COT审核筛选指标(19.1%)、患者安全指标(13.2%)、创伤中心/系统标准(10.2%)、衡量或对比护理结局的指标(7.4%)、同行评审(5.5%)、一般审核措施(1.8%)以及指南可用性或依从性(0.8%)。所识别出的最常见质量指标是院前和院内流程指标(60.4%)及结局指标(22.8%)。院后和继发性损伤预防质量指标占质量指标总数不到5%。
已提出许多用于评估创伤护理质量的质量指标,但支持这些指标的证据并不充分。选择质量指标以衡量创伤护理质量的实用建议将需要对已识别的候选指标进行系统综述以及开展实证研究,以填补急性后期质量指标方面的知识空白。