Alderson Sarah L, Bald Alexander, Carder Paul, Farrin Amanda, Foy Robbie
Leeds Institute of Health Science, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
School of Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
Implement Sci Commun. 2021 Jan 7;2(1):3. doi: 10.1186/s43058-020-00103-8.
There is a significant variation among individual primary care providers in prescribing of potentially problematic, low-value medicines which cause avoidable patient harm. Audit and feedback is generally effective at improving prescribing. However, progress has been hindered by research waste, leading to unanswered questions about how to include audit and feedback for specific problems and circumstances. Trials of different ways of providing audit and feedback in implementation laboratories have been proposed as a way of improving population healthcare while generating robust evidence on feedback effects. However, there is limited experience in their design and delivery.
To explore priorities, feasibility, and ethical challenges of establishing a primary care prescribing audit and feedback implementation laboratory.
Two-stage Delphi consensus process involving primary care pharmacy leads, audit and feedback researchers, and patient and public.
Participants initially scored statements relating to priorities, feasibility, and ethical considerations for an implementation laboratory. These covered current feedback practice, priority topics for feedback, usefulness of feedback in improving prescribing and different types of prescribing data, acceptability and desirability of different organization levels of randomization, options for trial consent, different methods of delivering feedback, and interest in finding out how effective different ways of presenting feedback would be. After receiving collated results, participants then scored the items again. The consensus was defined using the GRADE criteria. The results were analyzed by group and overall score.
Fourteen participants reached consensus for 38 out of 55 statements. Addressing antibiotic and opioid prescribing emerged as the highest priorities for action. The panel supported statements around addressing high-priority prescribing issues, taking an "opt-out" approach to practice consent if waiving consent was not permitted, and randomizing at lower rather than higher organizational levels. Participants supported patient-level prescribing data and further research evaluating most of the different feedback methods we presented them with.
There is a good level of support for evaluating a wide range of potential enhancements to improve the effects of feedback on prescribing. The successful design and delivery of a primary care audit and feedback implementation laboratory depend on identifying shared priorities and addressing practical and ethical considerations.
个体初级保健提供者在开具可能有问题的低价值药物处方方面存在显著差异,这些药物会造成可避免的患者伤害。审核与反馈通常能有效改善处方行为。然而,研究浪费阻碍了进展,导致关于如何针对特定问题和情况纳入审核与反馈的问题仍未得到解答。在实施实验室中对提供审核与反馈的不同方式进行试验,被提议作为改善人群医疗保健的一种方式,同时生成关于反馈效果的有力证据。然而,在其设计和实施方面经验有限。
探讨建立初级保健处方审核与反馈实施实验室的优先事项、可行性和伦理挑战。
两阶段德尔菲共识过程,涉及初级保健药房负责人、审核与反馈研究人员以及患者和公众。
参与者最初对与实施实验室的优先事项、可行性和伦理考量相关的陈述进行评分。这些陈述涵盖当前的反馈实践、反馈的优先主题、反馈在改善处方方面的有用性以及不同类型的处方数据、不同组织层面随机化的可接受性和可取性、试验同意的选项、提供反馈的不同方法,以及了解不同反馈呈现方式的有效性有多高的兴趣。在收到整理后的结果后,参与者再次对这些项目进行评分。使用GRADE标准定义共识。结果按组和总分进行分析。
14名参与者对55条陈述中的38条达成了共识。解决抗生素和阿片类药物处方问题成为最高优先行动事项。专家小组支持围绕解决高优先级处方问题的陈述,如果不允许放弃同意,则采取“退出”方式进行实践同意,以及在较低而非较高组织层面进行随机化。参与者支持患者层面的处方数据以及对我们向他们展示的大多数不同反馈方法进行进一步研究评估。
对于评估一系列潜在改进措施以提高反馈对处方的影响,有相当程度的支持。初级保健审核与反馈实施实验室的成功设计和实施取决于确定共同的优先事项并解决实际和伦理考量。