Campbell-Scherer Denise, Rogers Jess, Manca Donna, Lang-Robertson Kelly, Bell Stephanie, Salvalaggio Ginetta, Greiver Michelle, Korownyk Christina, Klein Doug, Carroll June C, Kahan Mel, Meuser Jamie, Buchman Sandy, Barrett Rebekah M, Grunfeld Eva
Department of Family Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alta.
Centre for Effective Practice, Toronto, Ont. ; Institute for Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.
CMAJ Open. 2014 Jan 22;2(1):E1-E10. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20130040. eCollection 2014 Jan.
The aim of the Building on Existing Tools to Improve Chronic Disease Prevention and Screening in Family Practice (BETTER) randomized controlled trial is to improve the primary prevention of and screening for multiple conditions (diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer) and some of the associated lifestyle factors (tobacco use, alcohol overuse, poor nutrition, physical inactivity). In this article, we describe how we harmonized the evidence-based clinical practice guideline recommendations and patient tools to determine the content for the BETTER trial.
We identified clinical practice guidelines and tools through a structured literature search; we included both indexed and grey literature. From these guidelines, recommendations were extracted and integrated into knowledge products and outcome measures for use in the BETTER trial. End-users (family physicians, nurse practitioners, nurses and dieticians) were engaged in reviewing the recommendations and tools, as well as tailoring the content to the needs of the BETTER trial and family practice.
In total, 3-5 high-quality guidelines were identified for each condition; from these, we identified high-grade recommendations for the prevention of and screening for chronic disease. The guideline recommendations were limited by conflicting recommendations, vague wording and different taxonomies for strength of recommendation. There was a lack of quality evidence for manoeuvres to improve the uptake of guidelines among patients with depression. We developed the BETTER clinical algorithms for the implementation plan. Although it was difficult to identify high-quality tools, 180 tools of interest were identified.
The intervention for the BETTER trial was built by integrating existing guidelines and tools, and working with end-users throughout the process to increase the intervention's utility for practice.
ISRCTN07170460.
“利用现有工具改善家庭医疗中的慢性病预防与筛查(BETTER)”随机对照试验的目的是改善对多种疾病(糖尿病、心血管疾病、癌症)以及一些相关生活方式因素(吸烟、过度饮酒、营养不良、缺乏身体活动)的一级预防和筛查。在本文中,我们描述了如何协调基于证据的临床实践指南建议和患者工具,以确定BETTER试验的内容。
我们通过结构化文献检索确定临床实践指南和工具;检索范围包括索引文献和灰色文献。从这些指南中提取建议,并将其整合到知识产品和结局指标中,用于BETTER试验。终端用户(家庭医生、执业护士、护士和营养师)参与审查建议和工具,并根据BETTER试验和家庭医疗的需求调整内容。
每种疾病总共确定了3 - 5份高质量指南;从中,我们确定了关于慢性病预防和筛查的高级别建议。指南建议存在相互冲突的建议、措辞模糊以及推荐强度分类不同等局限性。对于改善抑郁症患者对指南的接受度的措施,缺乏高质量证据。我们为实施计划制定了BETTER临床算法。虽然难以确定高质量工具,但确定了180份相关工具。
BETTER试验的干预措施是通过整合现有指南和工具,并在整个过程中与终端用户合作构建的,以提高干预措施在实践中的实用性。
ISRCTN07170460。