Department of Surgery, University of Chicago Medical Center, Chicago, IL.
Livongo Health Inc., Chicago, IL.
Health Serv Res. 2018 Oct;53(5):3350-3372. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.12850. Epub 2018 Mar 22.
To explore (1) differences in validity and feasibility ratings for geriatric surgical standards across a diverse stakeholder group (surgeons vs. nonsurgeons, health care providers vs. nonproviders, including patient-family, advocacy, and regulatory agencies); (2) whether three multidisciplinary discussion subgroups would reach similar conclusions.
DATA SOURCE/STUDY SETTING: Primary data (ratings) were reported from 58 stakeholder organizations.
An adaptation of the RAND-UCLA Appropriateness Methodology (RAM) process was conducted in May 2016.
DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: Stakeholders self-administered ratings on paper, returned via mail (Round 1) and in-person (Round 2).
In Round 1, surgeons rated standards more critically (91.2 percent valid; 64.9 percent feasible) than nonsurgeons (100 percent valid; 87.0 percent feasible) but increased ratings in Round 2 (98.7 percent valid; 90.6 percent feasible), aligning with nonsurgeons (99.7 percent valid; 96.1 percent feasible). Three parallel subgroups rated validity at 96.8 percent (group 1), 100 percent (group 2), and 97.4 percent (group 3). Feasibility ratings were 76.9 percent (group 1), 96.1 percent (group 2), and 92.2 percent (group 3).
There are differences in validity and feasibility ratings by health professions, with surgeons rating standards more critically than nonsurgeons. However, three separate discussion subgroups rated a high proportion (96-100 percent) of standards as valid, indicating the RAM can be successfully applied to a large stakeholder group.
(1)探索不同利益相关者群体(外科医生与非外科医生、医疗保健提供者与非提供者,包括患者家属、倡导和监管机构)对老年外科标准的有效性和可行性评分的差异;(2)三个多学科讨论小组是否会得出类似的结论。
资料来源/研究设置:主要数据(评分)由 58 个利益相关者组织报告。
2016 年 5 月采用 RAND-UCLA 适宜性方法(RAM)进行了改编。
数据收集/提取方法:利益相关者自行在纸上进行评分,通过邮件(第一轮)和面对面(第二轮)返回。
在第一轮中,外科医生对标准的评价更为严格(91.2%有效;64.9%可行),而非外科医生(100%有效;87.0%可行),但在第二轮中评分提高(98.7%有效;90.6%可行),与非外科医生一致(99.7%有效;96.1%可行)。三个平行小组的有效性评分分别为 96.8%(第 1 组)、100%(第 2 组)和 97.4%(第 3 组)。可行性评分分别为 76.9%(第 1 组)、96.1%(第 2 组)和 92.2%(第 3 组)。
不同医疗专业人员对有效性和可行性评分存在差异,外科医生对标准的评价比非外科医生更为严格。然而,三个独立的讨论小组对很大比例(96-100%)的标准进行了有效性评估,表明 RAM 可以成功应用于大型利益相关者群体。