Kastner Monika, Estey Elizabeth, Hayden Leigh, Chatterjee Ananda, Grudniewicz Agnes, Graham Ian D, Bhattacharyya Onil
Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St, Michael's Hospital, 209 Victoria Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
BMC Fam Pract. 2014 Jan 29;15:19. doi: 10.1186/1471-2296-15-19.
The potential of clinical practice guidelines has not been realized due to inconsistent adoption in clinical practice. Optimising intrinsic characteristics of guidelines (e.g., its wording and format) that are associated with uptake (as perceived by their end users) may have potential. Using findings from a realist review on guideline uptake and consultation with experts in guideline development, we designed a conceptual version of a future tool called Guideline Implementability Tool (GUIDE-IT). The tool will aim to involve family physicians in the guideline development process by providing a process to assess draft guideline recommendations. This feedback will then be given back to developers to consider when finalizing the recommendations. As guideline characteristics are best assessed by end-users, the objectives of the current study were to explore how family physicians perceive guideline implementability, and to determine what components should comprise the final GUIDE-IT prototype.
We conducted a qualitative study with family physicians in Toronto, Ontario. Two experienced investigators conducted one-hour interviews with family physicians using a semi-structured interview guide to 1) elicit feedback on perceptions on guideline implementability; 2) to generate a discussion in response to three draft recommendations; and 3) to provide feedback on the conceptual GUIDE-IT. Sessions were audio taped and transcribed verbatim. Data collection and analysis were guided by content analyses.
20 family physicians participated. They perceived guideline uptake according to facilitators and barriers across 6 categories of guideline implementability (format, content, language, usability, development, and the practice environment). Participants' feedback on 3 draft guideline recommendations were grouped according to guideline perception, cognition, and agreement. When asked to comment on GUIDE-IT, most respondents believed that the tool would be useful, but urged to involve "regular" or community family physicians in the process, and suggested that an online system would be the most efficient way to deliver it.
Our study identified facilitators and barriers of guideline implementability from the perspective of community and academic family physicians that will be used to build our GUIDE-IT prototype. Our findings build on current knowledge by showing that family physicians perceive guideline uptake mostly according to factors that are in the control of guideline developers.
由于临床实践中对临床实践指南的采用不一致,其潜力尚未得到发挥。优化与指南采用率(终端用户所感知的)相关的指南内在特征(如措辞和格式)可能具有潜力。利用一项关于指南采用的现实主义综述结果并咨询指南制定专家,我们设计了一个名为指南可实施性工具(GUIDE - IT)的未来工具的概念版本。该工具旨在通过提供一个评估指南草案建议的过程,让家庭医生参与到指南制定过程中。然后,这些反馈将反馈给开发者,以便在确定建议时加以考虑。由于指南特征最好由终端用户进行评估,本研究的目的是探讨家庭医生如何看待指南的可实施性,并确定最终的GUIDE - IT原型应包含哪些组件。
我们在安大略省多伦多市对家庭医生进行了一项定性研究。两名经验丰富的研究人员使用半结构化访谈指南对家庭医生进行了一小时的访谈,以:1)收集关于指南可实施性看法的反馈;2)针对三项草案建议展开讨论;3)对概念性的GUIDE - IT提供反馈。访谈进行了录音并逐字转录。数据收集和分析以内容分析为指导。
20名家庭医生参与。他们根据指南可实施性的6个类别(格式、内容、语言、可用性、制定过程和实践环境)中的促进因素和障碍来感知指南的采用情况。参与者对三项指南草案建议的反馈根据指南感知、认知和认同进行了分组。当被要求对GUIDE - IT发表评论时,大多数受访者认为该工具会很有用,但敦促在这个过程中纳入“普通”或社区家庭医生,并建议在线系统是提供该工具的最有效方式。
我们的研究从社区和学术家庭医生的角度确定了指南可实施性的促进因素和障碍,这些将用于构建我们的GUIDE - IT原型。我们的研究结果基于现有知识,表明家庭医生主要根据指南开发者能够控制的因素来感知指南的采用情况。