School of Health Sciences, City University of London, London, United Kingdom.
Centre for Behaviour Change, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2018 Nov 1;13(11):e0206676. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0206676. eCollection 2018.
National clinical audits play key roles in improving care and driving system-wide change. However, effects of audit and feedback depend upon both reach (e.g. relevant staff receiving the feedback) and response (e.g. staff regulating their behaviour accordingly). This study aimed to investigate which hospital staff initially receive feedback and formulate a response, how feedback is disseminated within hospitals, and how responses are enacted (including barriers and enablers to enactment). Using a multiple case study approach, we purposively sampled four UK hospitals for variation in infrastructure and resources. We conducted semi-structured interviews with staff from transfusion-related roles and observed Hospital Transfusion Committee meetings. Interviews and analysis were based on the Theoretical Domains Framework of behaviour change. We coded interview transcripts into theoretical domains, then inductively identified themes within each domain to identify barriers and enablers. We also analysed data to identify which staff currently receive feedback and how dissemination is managed within the hospital. Members of the hospital's transfusion team initially received feedback in all cases, and were primarily responsible for disseminating and responding, facilitated through the Hospital Transfusion Committee. At each hospital, key individuals involved in prescribing transfusions reported never having received feedback from a national audit. Whether audits were discussed and actions explicitly agreed in Committee meetings varied between hospitals. Key enablers of action across all cases included clear lines of responsibility and strategies to remind staff about recommendations. Barriers included difficulties disseminating to relevant staff and needing to amend feedback to make it appropriate for local use. Appropriate responses by hospital staff to feedback about blood transfusion practice depend upon supportive infrastructures and role clarity. Hospitals could benefit from support to disseminate feedback systematically, particularly to frontline staff involved in the behaviours being audited, and practical tools to support strategic decision-making (e.g. action-planning around local response to feedback).
国家临床审计在改善护理和推动全系统变革方面发挥着关键作用。然而,审计和反馈的效果取决于覆盖面(例如,相关员工收到反馈)和响应(例如,员工相应地调整行为)。本研究旨在调查哪些医院员工最初收到反馈并做出响应,医院内部如何传播反馈,以及如何实施响应(包括实施的障碍和促进因素)。我们采用多案例研究方法,根据基础设施和资源的差异,有目的地选择了英国的四家医院。我们对与输血相关的角色的员工进行了半结构化访谈,并观察了医院输血委员会会议。访谈和分析基于行为改变的理论领域框架。我们将访谈记录编码为理论领域,然后在每个领域中归纳主题,以确定障碍和促进因素。我们还分析数据,以确定哪些员工目前收到反馈以及医院内部如何管理传播。医院输血团队的成员在所有情况下最初都收到了反馈,并且主要负责通过医院输血委员会进行传播和响应。在每家医院,参与开输血处方的关键人员报告从未收到过来自国家审计的反馈。委员会会议中是否讨论和明确同意行动因医院而异。所有情况下的行动的主要促进因素包括明确的责任线和提醒员工注意建议的策略。障碍包括向相关员工传播的困难以及需要修改反馈以使适用于当地使用。医院员工对输血实践的反馈做出适当响应取决于支持性的基础设施和角色明确性。医院可以从系统传播反馈中受益,特别是向参与正在审计的行为的一线员工传播反馈,并提供实用的工具来支持战略决策(例如,围绕对反馈的本地响应进行行动计划)。