Lynch Elizabeth A, Cadilhac Dominique A, Luker Julie A, Hillier Susan L
Department of Health Sciences, International Centre for Allied Health Evidence, University of South Australia, GPO Box 2471, Adelaide, 5001, Australia.
Stroke Division, The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, 245 Burgundy St, Heidelberg, 3084, VIC, Australia.
Implement Sci. 2016 Sep 7;11(1):120. doi: 10.1186/s13012-016-0487-2.
In 2011, more than half of the patients with stroke in Australian hospitals were not assessed for the need for rehabilitation. Further, there were no recommended criteria to guide rehabilitation assessment decisions. Subsequently, a decision-making tool called the Assessment for Rehabilitation Tool (ART) was developed. The ART was designed to assist Australian hospital clinicians to identify the rehabilitation needs of patients with stroke using evidence-based criteria. The ART was released and made freely available for use in 2012. This study evaluated the effectiveness of an education-only intervention (1 onsite education session and distribution of the ART) and a multifaceted intervention (2 or more onsite education sessions, distribution of the ART, audit and feedback, barrier identification, site-specific strategy development, promotion of interdisciplinary teamwork, opinion leaders and reminders) for improving assessments of rehabilitation needs after stroke.
Ten hospitals in 2 states of Australia were randomly assigned to an education-only or a multifaceted intervention. Medical records were audited by assessors blinded to group allocation before and after the implementation period. Difference in the proportion of patients assessed for rehabilitation before and after the intervention was analysed using mixed-effects logistic regression analysis, with time period as the dependent variable, an interaction between intervention type and time included to test for differences between the interventions, and hospital included as the random effect to account for patient clustering.
Data from 586 patients (284 pre-intervention; 302 post-intervention; age 76 years, 59 % male) showed that the multifaceted intervention was not more effective than education-only in improving the proportion of patients whose rehabilitation needs were assessed (reference category education-only; odds ratio 1.29, 95 % confidence interval 0.63-2.67, p = 0.483). Post-intervention, the odds of a patient's rehabilitation needs being assessed was 3.69 times greater than pre-intervention (95 % confidence interval 2.57-5.30, p < 0.001). Evidence-based criteria were not consistently used when patients were deemed to have no rehabilitation needs.
A multifaceted intervention was not more effective than education-only in improving the assessment of rehabilitation needs of patients with stroke. Further interventions are required to ensure that all patients are assessed for the need for rehabilitation using evidence-based criteria.
ANZCTR (Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry), ACTRN12616000340437.
2011年,澳大利亚医院中超过半数的中风患者未接受康复需求评估。此外,也没有推荐标准来指导康复评估决策。随后,一种名为康复评估工具(ART)的决策工具被开发出来。ART旨在帮助澳大利亚医院的临床医生使用循证标准来确定中风患者的康复需求。ART于2012年发布并免费供人使用。本研究评估了仅进行教育干预(1次现场教育课程及发放ART)和多方面干预(2次或更多现场教育课程、发放ART、审核与反馈、障碍识别、制定针对具体场所的策略、促进跨学科团队合作、意见领袖及提醒)对改善中风后康复需求评估的效果。
澳大利亚两个州的10家医院被随机分配至仅教育干预组或多方面干预组。在实施期前后,由对分组情况不知情的评估人员审核病历。使用混合效应逻辑回归分析来分析干预前后接受康复评估的患者比例差异,以时间段作为因变量,纳入干预类型与时间的交互项以检验干预之间的差异,并将医院作为随机效应纳入以考虑患者聚集情况。
586例患者(干预前284例;干预后302例;年龄76岁,男性占59%)的数据显示,在改善康复需求得到评估的患者比例方面,多方面干预并不比仅教育干预更有效(参照类别为仅教育干预;比值比1.29,95%置信区间0.63 - 2.67,p = 0.483)。干预后,患者康复需求得到评估的几率比干预前高3.69倍(95%置信区间2.57 - 5.30,p < 0.001)。当患者被认为没有康复需求时,循证标准并未得到一致应用。
在改善中风患者康复需求评估方面,多方面干预并不比仅教育干预更有效。需要进一步干预以确保所有患者都使用循证标准接受康复需求评估。
澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心(ANZCTR),ACTRN12616000340437 。