Lyndon Audrey, Cape Valerie
Audrey Lyndon is an Associate Professor, Department of Family Health Care Nursing, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; and Hemorrhage Taskforce Co-Chair & Executive Committee Member, California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative, Stanford, CA. The author can be reached via e-mail at
MCN Am J Matern Child Nurs. 2016 Nov/Dec;41(6):363-371. doi: 10.1097/NMC.0000000000000277.
The purpose of this study was to describe user experience with implementation of an obstetric hemorrhage toolkit and determine the degree of implementation of recommended practices that occurred during a 31-hospital quality improvement learning collaborative.
This descriptive qualitative study included semistructured interviews with 22 implementation team leaders and review of transcripts from collaborative reporting calls recorded during the hemorrhage collaborative. Interviews included open-ended, closed, and ranking questions. Numeric responses were analyzed with descriptive statistics. Open-ended responses and call transcripts were analyzed thematically.
Each of the 10 core toolkit components was ranked as currently "implemented" or "implemented and sustained" by at least 77% of interviewees. Most core elements were deemed "critical to retain." Respondents found debriefing the most difficult element of the toolkit to implement and sustain. Organizational context was the overarching theme regarding factors facilitating or constraining implementation. This included organizational structure and culture, previous experience with quality improvement, resources, and clinician engagement. Nurses were deeply involved in implementation and "physician buy-in" was a frequently mentioned facilitator when present and barrier when absent.
Greater understanding of and attention to organizational context and resources, greater appreciation for nursing involvement, and increased recognition of the role of organizational leadership are needed to facilitate widespread improvement initiatives in maternity care. Implementation science approaches may be useful in achieving national goals for maternal quality improvement and safety.
本研究旨在描述产科出血工具包实施过程中的用户体验,并确定在一个由31家医院参与的质量改进学习协作项目中推荐措施的实施程度。
这项描述性定性研究包括对22名实施团队负责人进行半结构化访谈,以及审查出血协作项目期间录制的协作报告电话会议记录。访谈包括开放式、封闭式和排序问题。对数值性回答进行描述性统计分析。对开放式回答和电话会议记录进行主题分析。
至少77%的受访者将10个核心工具包组件中的每一个都列为当前“已实施”或“已实施并持续”。大多数核心要素被认为“对保留至关重要”。受访者发现,工具包中最难实施和维持的要素是汇报总结。组织背景是影响实施的促进或制约因素的首要主题。这包括组织结构和文化、以往质量改进经验、资源以及临床医生的参与度。护士深度参与实施过程,“医生支持”在存在时是一个经常被提及的促进因素,而在不存在时则是一个障碍。
为了推动产科护理领域的广泛改进举措,需要更深入地了解和关注组织背景与资源,更重视护士的参与,并提高对组织领导作用的认识。实施科学方法可能有助于实现国家提高孕产妇质量和安全的目标。