Giguère Anik, Zomahoun Hervé Tchala Vignon, Carmichael Pierre-Hugues, Uwizeye Claude Bernard, Légaré France, Grimshaw Jeremy M, Gagnon Marie-Pierre, Auguste David U, Massougbodji José
Department of Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine, Laval University, Québec, Canada.
VITAM Research center on Sustainable Health, Quebec, Canada.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Jul 31;8(8):CD004398. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004398.pub4.
Printed educational materials are widely used dissemination strategies to improve the quality of healthcare professionals' practice and patient health outcomes. Traditionally they are presented in paper formats such as monographs, publication in peer-reviewed journals and clinical guidelines. This is the fourth update of the review.
To assess the effect of printed educational materials (PEMs) on the practice of healthcare professionals and patient health outcomes. To explore the influence of some of the characteristics of the printed educational materials (e.g. source, content, format) on their effect on healthcare professionals' practice and patient health outcomes.
We searched MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), HealthStar, CINAHL, ERIC, CAB Abstracts, Global Health, and EPOC Register from their inception to 6 February 2019. We checked the reference lists of all included studies and relevant systematic reviews.
We included randomised trials (RTs), controlled before-after studies (CBAs) and interrupted time series studies (ITSs) that evaluated the impact of PEMs on healthcare professionals' practice or patient health outcomes. We included three types of comparisons: (1) PEM versus no intervention, (2) PEM versus single intervention, (3) multifaceted intervention where PEM is included versus multifaceted intervention without PEM. Any objective measure of professional practice (e.g. prescriptions for a particular drug), or patient health outcomes (e.g. blood pressure) were included.
Two reviewers undertook data extraction independently. Disagreements were resolved by discussion. For analyses, we grouped the included studies according to study design, type of outcome and type of comparison. For controlled trials, we reported the median effect size for each outcome within each study, the median effect size across outcomes for each study and the median of these effect sizes across studies. Where data were available, we re-analysed the ITS studies by converting all data to a monthly basis and estimating the effect size from the change in the slope of the regression line between before and after implementation of the PEM. We reported median changes in slope for each outcome, for each study, and then across studies. We standardised all changes in slopes by their standard error, allowing comparisons and combination of different outcomes. We categorised each PEM according to potential effects modifiers related to the source of the PEMs, the channel used for their delivery, their content, and their format. We assessed the risks of bias of all the included studies.
We included 84 studies: 32 RTs, two CBAs and 50 ITS studies. Of the 32 RTs, 19 were cluster RTs that used various units of randomisation, such as practices, health centres, towns, or areas. The majority of the included studies (82/84) compared the effectiveness of PEMs to no intervention. Based on the RTs that provided moderate-certainty evidence, we found that PEMs distributed to healthcare professionals probably improve their practice, as measured with dichotomous variables, compared to no intervention (median absolute risk difference (ARD): 0.04; interquartile range (IQR): 0.01 to 0.09; 3,963 healthcare professionals randomised within 3073 units). We could not confirm this finding using the evidence gathered from continuous variables (standardised mean difference (SMD): 0.11; IQR: -0.16 to 0.52; 1631 healthcare professionals randomised within 1373 units ), from the ITS studies (standardised median change in slope = 0.69; 35 studies), or from the CBA study because the certainty of this evidence was very low. We also found, based on RTs that provided moderate-certainty evidence, that PEMs distributed to healthcare professionals probably make little or no difference to patient health as measured using dichotomous variables, compared to no intervention (ARD: 0.02; IQR: -0.005 to 0.09; 935,015 patients randomised within 959 units). The evidence gathered from continuous variables (SMD: 0.05; IQR: -0.12 to 0.09; 6,737 patients randomised within 594 units) or from ITS study results (standardised median change in slope = 1.12; 8 studies) do not strengthen these findings because the certainty of this evidence was very low. Two studies (a randomised trial and a CBA) compared a paper-based version to a computerised version of the same PEM. From the RT that provided evidence of low certainty, we found that PEM in computerised versions may make little or no difference to professionals' practice compared to PEM in printed versions (ARD: -0.02; IQR: -0.03 to 0.00; 139 healthcare professionals randomised individually). This finding was not strengthened by the CBA study that provided very low certainty evidence (SMD: 0.44; 32 healthcare professionals). The data gathered did not allow us to conclude which PEM characteristics influenced their effectiveness. The methodological quality of the included studies was variable. Half of the included RTs were at risk of selection bias. Most of the ITS studies were conducted retrospectively, without prespecifying the expected effect of the intervention, or acknowledging the presence of a secular trend.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The results of this review suggest that, when used alone and compared to no intervention, PEMs may slightly improve healthcare professionals' practice outcomes and patient health outcomes. The effectiveness of PEMs compared to other interventions, or of PEMs as part of a multifaceted intervention, is uncertain.
印刷教育材料是广泛使用的传播策略,用于提高医疗保健专业人员的实践质量和患者健康结局。传统上,它们以纸质形式呈现,如专题论文、发表在同行评审期刊上的文章和临床指南。这是该综述的第四次更新。
评估印刷教育材料(PEMs)对医疗保健专业人员实践和患者健康结局的影响。探讨印刷教育材料的一些特征(如来源、内容、格式)对其对医疗保健专业人员实践和患者健康结局影响的作用。
我们检索了MEDLINE、Embase、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)、HealthStar、CINAHL、ERIC、CAB文摘库、全球健康数据库和EPOC注册库,检索时间从各库建库至2019年2月6日。我们检查了所有纳入研究和相关系统评价的参考文献列表。
我们纳入了评估PEMs对医疗保健专业人员实践或患者健康结局影响的随机试验(RTs)、前后对照研究(CBAs)和中断时间序列研究(ITSs)。我们纳入了三种比较类型:(1)PEMs与无干预,(2)PEMs与单一干预,(3)包含PEMs的多方面干预与不包含PEMs的多方面干预。纳入任何专业实践的客观测量指标(如特定药物的处方)或患者健康结局指标(如血压)。
两名评审员独立进行数据提取。通过讨论解决分歧。为了进行分析,我们根据研究设计、结局类型和比较类型对纳入研究进行分组。对于对照试验,我们报告了每项研究中每个结局的中位效应量、每项研究中所有结局的中位效应量以及这些效应量在各研究中的中位数。在有数据的情况下,我们通过将所有数据转换为月度数据并根据PEMs实施前后回归线斜率的变化估计效应量,对ITS研究进行了重新分析。我们报告了每项研究中每个结局的斜率中位数变化,然后是各研究的斜率中位数变化。我们通过标准误对所有斜率变化进行标准化,以便比较和合并不同的结局。我们根据与PEMs来源、传播渠道、内容和格式相关的潜在效应修饰因素对每个PEM进行分类。我们评估了所有纳入研究的偏倚风险。
我们纳入了84项研究:32项随机试验、2项前后对照研究和50项中断时间序列研究。在32项随机试验中,19项是整群随机试验,使用了各种随机化单位,如医疗机构、健康中心、城镇或地区。大多数纳入研究(82/84)将PEMs的有效性与无干预进行了比较。基于提供中等确定性证据的随机试验,我们发现,与无干预相比,分发给医疗保健专业人员的PEMs可能会改善他们的实践,以二分变量衡量(中位绝对风险差(ARD):0.04;四分位间距(IQR):0.01至0.09;在3073个单位内随机分配了3963名医疗保健专业人员)。使用从连续变量收集的证据(标准化均数差(SMD):0.11;IQR:-0.16至0.52;在1373个单位内随机分配了1631名医疗保健专业人员)、中断时间序列研究(斜率标准化中位数变化=0.69;35项研究)或前后对照研究,我们无法证实这一发现,因为该证据的确定性非常低。我们还发现,基于提供中等确定性证据的随机试验,与无干预相比,分发给医疗保健专业人员的PEMs对患者健康的影响可能很小或没有影响,以二分变量衡量(ARD:0.02;IQR:-0.005至0.09;在959个单位内随机分配了935015名患者)。从连续变量收集的证据(SMD:0.05;IQR:-0.12至0.09;在594个单位内随机分配了6737名患者)或中断时间序列研究结果(斜率标准化中位数变化=1.12;8项研究)并未加强这些发现,因为该证据确定性非常低。两项研究(一项随机试验和一项前后对照研究)将同一PEM的纸质版与电子版进行了比较。从提供低确定性证据的随机试验中,我们发现,与印刷版PEM相比,电子版PEM对专业人员实践的影响可能很小或没有影响(ARD:-0.02;IQR:-0.03至0.00;139名医疗保健专业人员被个体随机分配)。提供非常低确定性证据的前后对照研究(SMD:0.44;32名医疗保健专业人员)并未加强这一发现。收集到的数据无法让我们得出哪种PEM特征影响其有效性的结论。纳入研究的方法学质量参差不齐。一半的纳入随机试验存在选择偏倚风险。大多数中断时间序列研究是回顾性进行的,没有预先指定干预的预期效果,也没有承认长期趋势的存在。
本综述结果表明,与无干预相比,单独使用PEMs可能会略微改善医疗保健专业人员的实践结局和患者健康结局。与其他干预措施相比,PEMs的有效性,或作为多方面干预措施一部分的PEMs的有效性尚不确定。