School of Healthcare and the Wolfson Centre for Applied Health Research, University of Leeds, Leeds, England.
School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Leeds, Leeds, England.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 Sep 11;20(1):859. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-05661-0.
National Clinical Audits (NCAs) are a well-established quality improvement strategy used in healthcare settings. Significant resources, including clinicians' time, are invested in participating in NCAs, yet there is variation in the extent to which the resulting feedback stimulates quality improvement. The aim of this study was to explore the reasons behind this variation.
We used realist evaluation to interrogate how context shapes the mechanisms through which NCAs work (or not) to stimulate quality improvement. Fifty-four interviews were conducted with doctors, nurses, audit clerks and other staff working with NCAs across five healthcare providers in England. In line with realist principles we scrutinised the data to identify how and why providers responded to NCA feedback (mechanisms), the circumstances that supported or constrained provider responses (context), and what happened as a result of the interactions between mechanisms and context (outcomes). We summarised our findings as Context+Mechanism = Outcome configurations.
We identified five mechanisms that explained provider interactions with NCA feedback: reputation, professionalism, competition, incentives, and professional development. Professionalism and incentives underpinned most frequent interaction with feedback, providing opportunities to stimulate quality improvement. Feedback was used routinely in these ways where it was generated from data stored in local databases before upload to NCA suppliers. Local databases enabled staff to access data easily, customise feedback and, importantly, the data were trusted as accurate, due to the skills and experience of staff supporting audit participation. Feedback produced by NCA suppliers, which included national comparator data, was used in a more limited capacity across providers. Challenges accessing supplier data in a timely way and concerns about the quality of data submitted across providers were reported to constrain use of this mode of feedback.
The findings suggest that there are a number of mechanisms that underpin healthcare providers' interactions with NCA feedback. However, there is variation in the mode, frequency and impact of these interactions. Feedback was used most routinely, providing opportunities to stimulate quality improvement, within clinical services resourced to collect accurate data and to maintain local databases from which feedback could be customised for the needs of the service.
国家临床审计(NCAs)是一种在医疗保健环境中广泛应用的成熟的质量改进策略。为了参与 NCAs,投入了大量资源,包括临床医生的时间,但反馈在多大程度上刺激了质量改进却存在差异。本研究旨在探讨这种差异的原因。
我们使用现实主义评估来探究背景如何影响 NCAs 工作(或不工作)以刺激质量改进的机制。我们对来自英格兰五个医疗保健提供者的医生、护士、审计员和其他参与 NCAs 的工作人员进行了 54 次访谈。根据现实主义原则,我们仔细审查了数据,以确定提供者如何以及为何对 NCA 反馈(机制)做出反应,支持或限制提供者反应的情况(背景),以及机制和背景之间的相互作用产生了什么结果(结果)。我们将发现总结为“背景+机制=结果”配置。
我们确定了五个解释提供者与 NCA 反馈相互作用的机制:声誉、专业精神、竞争、激励和专业发展。专业精神和激励是最频繁地与反馈互动的基础,为刺激质量改进提供了机会。在将数据上传到 NCA 供应商之前,这些方式是在本地数据库中存储数据生成反馈时经常使用的。本地数据库使员工能够轻松访问数据,自定义反馈,而且由于支持审计参与的员工的技能和经验,数据被认为是准确的,这一点很重要。由 NCA 供应商生成的反馈,包括国家比较器数据,在提供者中使用的范围有限。在及时访问供应商数据方面的挑战以及对跨提供者提交数据质量的担忧,据报道限制了这种反馈模式的使用。
调查结果表明,有许多机制支持医疗保健提供者与 NCA 反馈的相互作用。然而,这些相互作用的模式、频率和影响存在差异。在资源充足的临床服务中,反馈最常被使用,为刺激质量改进提供了机会,这些服务能够收集准确的数据并维护可以为服务需求定制反馈的本地数据库。