Baatiema Leonard, Otim Michael E, Mnatzaganian George, de-Graft Aikins Ama, Coombes Judith, Somerset Shawn
Regional Institute for Population Studies, University of Ghana, P.O Box LG96, Legon-Accra, Ghana.
School of Allied Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Australian Catholic University, Sydney, Australia.
Implement Sci. 2017 Jun 5;12(1):74. doi: 10.1186/s13012-017-0599-3.
Adoption of contemporary evidence-based guidelines for acute stroke management is often delayed due to a range of key enablers and barriers. Recent reviews on such barriers focus mainly on specific acute stroke therapies or generalised stroke care guidelines. This review examined the overall barriers and enablers, as perceived by health professionals which affect how evidence-based practice guidelines (stroke unit care, thrombolysis administration, aspirin usage and decompressive surgery) for acute stroke care are adopted in hospital settings.
A systematic search of databases was conducted using MEDLINE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Embase, PsycINFO, Cochrane Library and AMED (Allied and Complementary Medicine Database from 1990 to 2016. The population of interest included health professionals working clinically or in roles responsible for acute stroke care. There were no restrictions to the study designs. A quality appraisal tool for qualitative studies by the Joanna Briggs Institute and another for quantitative studies by the Centre for Evidence-Based Management were used in the present study. A recent checklist to classify barriers and enablers to health professionals' adherence to evidence-based practice was also used.
Ten studies met the inclusion criteria out of a total of 9832 search results. The main barriers or enablers identified included poor organisational or institutional level support, health professionals' limited skills or competence to use a particular therapy, low level of awareness, familiarity or confidence in the effectiveness of a particular evidence-based therapy, limited medical facilities to support evidence uptake, inadequate peer support among health professionals', complex nature of some stroke care therapies or guidelines and patient level barriers.
Despite considerable evidence supporting various specific therapies for stroke care, uptake of these therapies is compromised by barriers across organisational, patients, guideline interventions and health professionals' domains. As a result, we recommend that future interventions and health policy directions should be informed by these findings in order to optimise uptake of best practice acute stroke care. Further studies from low- to middle-income countries are needed to understand the barriers and enablers in such settings.
The review protocol was registered in the international prospective register of systematic reviews, PROSPERO 2015 (Registration Number: CRD42015023481 ).
由于一系列关键的促进因素和障碍,当代基于证据的急性卒中管理指南的采用往往会延迟。最近关于此类障碍的综述主要集中在特定的急性卒中治疗方法或广义的卒中护理指南上。本综述研究了卫生专业人员所认为的影响医院环境中急性卒中护理的循证实践指南(卒中单元护理、溶栓治疗、阿司匹林使用和减压手术)采用情况的总体障碍和促进因素。
使用MEDLINE、护理及相关健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)、Embase、PsycINFO、Cochrane图书馆和AMED(1990年至2016年的补充和替代医学数据库)对数据库进行系统检索。感兴趣的人群包括临床工作或负责急性卒中护理的卫生专业人员。对研究设计没有限制。本研究使用了乔安娜·布里格斯研究所的定性研究质量评估工具和循证管理中心的定量研究质量评估工具。还使用了最近的一份清单来对卫生专业人员遵守循证实践的障碍和促进因素进行分类。
在总共9832条检索结果中,有10项研究符合纳入标准。确定的主要障碍或促进因素包括组织或机构层面的支持不足、卫生专业人员使用特定治疗方法的技能或能力有限、对特定循证治疗方法的有效性认识、熟悉程度或信心水平较低、支持证据应用的医疗设施有限、卫生专业人员之间的同行支持不足、某些卒中护理治疗方法或指南的复杂性以及患者层面的障碍。
尽管有大量证据支持各种特定的卒中护理治疗方法,但这些治疗方法的采用受到组织、患者、指南干预和卫生专业人员等领域的障碍的影响。因此,我们建议未来的干预措施和卫生政策方向应以这些研究结果为依据,以优化最佳实践急性卒中护理的采用。需要来自低收入和中等收入国家的进一步研究,以了解这些环境中的障碍和促进因素。
该综述方案已在国际系统评价前瞻性注册库PROSPERO 2015中注册(注册号:CRD42015023481)。