Lee Henry C, Powers Richard J, Bennett Mihoko V, Finer Neil N, Halamek Louis P, Nisbet Courtney, Crockett Margaret, Chance Kathy, Blackney David, von Köhler Connie, Kurtin Paul, Sharek Paul J
Divisions of Neonatal & Developmental Medicine and California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative, Palo Alto, California;
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Good Samaritan Hospital, San Jose, California;
Pediatrics. 2014 Nov;134(5):e1378-86. doi: 10.1542/peds.2014-0863. Epub 2014 Oct 20.
There is little evidence to compare the effectiveness of large collaborative quality improvement versus individual local projects.
This was a prospective pre-post intervention study of neonatal resuscitation practice, comparing 3 groups of nonrandomized hospitals in the California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative: (1) collaborative, hospitals working together through face-to-face meetings, webcasts, electronic mailing list, and data sharing; (2) individual, hospitals working independently; and (3) nonparticipant hospitals. The collaborative and individual arms participated in improvement activities, focusing on reducing hypothermia and invasive ventilatory support.
There were 20 collaborative, 31 individual, and 44 nonparticipant hospitals caring for 12,528 eligible infants. Each group had reduced hypothermia from baseline to postintervention. The collaborative group had the most significant decrease in hypothermia, from 39% to 21%, compared with individual hospital efforts of 38% to 33%, and nonparticipants of 42% to 34%. After risk adjustment, the collaborative group had twice the magnitude of decrease in rates of newborns with hypothermia compared with the other groups. Collaborative improvement also led to greater decreases in delivery room intubation (53% to 40%) and surfactant administration (37% to 20%).
Collaborative efforts resulted in larger improvements in delivery room outcomes and processes than individual efforts or nonparticipation. These findings have implications for planning quality improvement projects for implementation of evidence-based practices.
几乎没有证据可用于比较大型协作式质量改进与单个本地项目的有效性。
这是一项关于新生儿复苏实践的前瞻性干预前后研究,比较了加利福尼亚围产期质量护理协作组织中3组非随机分组的医院:(1)协作组,医院通过面对面会议、网络直播、电子邮件列表和数据共享共同开展工作;(2)单个组,医院独立开展工作;(3)非参与组医院。协作组和单个组参与改进活动,重点是降低体温过低和有创通气支持的发生率。
有20家协作组医院、31家单个组医院和44家非参与组医院参与了对12528名符合条件婴儿的护理。每组从基线到干预后体温过低发生率均有所降低。协作组体温过低发生率下降最为显著,从39%降至21%,相比之下,单个医院努力后从38%降至33%,非参与组从42%降至34%。经过风险调整后,与其他组相比,协作组体温过低新生儿发生率下降幅度是其他组的两倍。协作式改进还使产房插管率(从53%降至40%)和表面活性剂使用率(从37%降至20%)有更大幅度的下降。
协作式努力比单个努力或不参与能在产房结局和流程方面带来更大的改进。这些发现对于规划基于循证实践的质量改进项目具有启示意义。