Irimu Grace W, Greene Alexandra, Gathara David, Kihara Harrison, Maina Christopher, Mbori-Ngacha Dorothy, Zurovac Dejan, Migiro Santau, English Mike
Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, College of Health Sciences, University of Nairobi, P,O, Box 19676-00202, Nairobi, Kenya.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2014 Feb 7;14:59. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-59.
Implementation of World Health Organization case management guidelines for serious childhood illnesses remains a challenge in hospitals in low-income countries. Facilitators of and barriers to implementation of locally adapted clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) have not been explored.
This ethnographic study based on the theory of participatory action research (PAR) was conducted in Kenyatta National Hospital, Kenya's largest teaching hospital. The primary intervention consisted of dissemination of locally adapted CPGs. The PRECEDE-PROCEED health education model was used as the conceptual framework to guide and examine further reinforcement activities to improve the uptake of the CPGs. Activities focussed on introduction of routine clinical audits and tailored educational sessions. Data were collected by a participant observer who also facilitated the PAR over an eighteen-month period. Naturalistic inquiry was utilized to obtain information from all hospital staff encountered while theoretical sampling allowed in-depth exploration of emerging issues. Data were analysed using interpretive description.
Relevance of the CPGs to routine work and emergence of a champion of change facilitated uptake of best-practices. Mobilization of basic resources was relatively easily undertaken while activities that required real intellectual and professional engagement of the senior staff were a challenge. Accomplishments of the PAR were largely with the passive rather than active involvement of the hospital management. Barriers to implementation of best-practices included i) mismatch between the hospital's vision and reality, ii) poor communication, iii) lack of objective mechanisms for monitoring and evaluating quality of clinical care, iv) limited capacity for planning strategic change, v) limited management skills to introduce and manage change, vi) hierarchical relationships, and vii) inadequate adaptation of the interventions to the local context.
Educational interventions, often regarded as 'quick-fixes' to improve care in low-income countries, may be necessary but are unlikely to be sufficient to deliver improved services. We propose that an understanding of organizational issues that influence the behaviour of individual health professionals should guide and inform the implementation of best-practices.
在低收入国家的医院中,实施世界卫生组织针对儿童重症疾病的病例管理指南仍是一项挑战。尚未对实施本地适应性临床实践指南(CPG)的促进因素和障碍进行探讨。
本民族志研究基于参与式行动研究(PAR)理论,在肯尼亚最大的教学医院——肯雅塔国家医院开展。主要干预措施包括传播本地适应性CPG。采用PRECEDE-PROCEED健康教育模型作为概念框架,以指导和检验进一步的强化活动,以提高CPG的采用率。活动重点是引入常规临床审计和量身定制的教育课程。数据由一名参与观察的人员收集,该人员在18个月的时间里还推动了PAR。采用自然主义探究法从所有遇到的医院工作人员那里获取信息,同时理论抽样允许对新出现的问题进行深入探索。使用解释性描述对数据进行分析。
CPG与日常工作的相关性以及变革倡导者的出现促进了最佳实践的采用。基本资源的调动相对容易,而需要高级工作人员真正投入智力和专业精力的活动则是一项挑战。PAR的成果很大程度上是在医院管理层被动而非主动参与的情况下取得的。实施最佳实践的障碍包括:i)医院愿景与现实之间的不匹配,ii)沟通不畅,iii)缺乏监测和评估临床护理质量的客观机制,iv)规划战略变革的能力有限,v)引入和管理变革的管理技能有限,vi)等级关系,以及vii)干预措施对当地情况的适应性不足。
教育干预措施通常被视为改善低收入国家医疗服务的“快速解决方案”,可能是必要的,但不太可能足以提供改进后的服务。我们建议,对影响个体卫生专业人员行为的组织问题的理解应指导并为最佳实践的实施提供信息。