Department of Social and Preventative Medicine, Université Laval, Québec City, Québec, Canada.
Population Health and Optimal Health Practices Research Unit, Trauma-Emergency-Critical Care Medicine, Centre de Recherche du CHU de Québec (Hôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus), Université Laval, Québec City, Québec, Canada.
JAMA Surg. 2022 Jun 1;157(6):507-514. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2022.0812.
The use of quality indicators has been shown to improve injury care processes and outcomes. However, trauma quality indicators proposed to date exclusively target the underuse of recommended practices. Initiatives such as Choosing Wisely publish lists of practices to be questioned, but few apply to trauma care, and most have not successfully been translated to quality indicators.
To develop a set of evidence and patient-informed, consensus-based quality indicators targeting reductions in low-value clinical practices in acute, in-hospital trauma care.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This 2-round Research and Development/University of California at Los Angeles (RAND/UCLA) consensus study, conducted from April 20 to June 9, 2021, comprised an online questionnaire and a virtual workshop led by 2 independent moderators. Two panels of international experts from Canada, Australia, the US, and the UK, and local stakeholders from Québec, Canada, represented key clinical expertise involved in trauma care and included 3 patient partners.
Panelists were asked to rate 50 practices on a 7-point Likert scale according to 4 quality indicator criteria: importance, supporting evidence, actionability, and measurability.
Of 49 eligible experts approached, 46 (94%; 18 experts [39%] aged ≥50 years; 37 men [80%]) completed at least 1 round and 36 (73%) completed both rounds. Eleven quality indicators were selected overall, 2 more were selected by the international panel and a further 3 by the local stakeholder panel. Selected indicators targeted low-value clinical practices in the following aspects of trauma care: (1) initial diagnostic imaging (head, cervical spine, ankle, and pelvis), (2) repeated diagnostic imaging (posttransfer computed tomography [CT] and repeated head CT), (3) consultation (neurosurgical and spine), (4) surgery (penetrating neck injury), (5) blood product administration, (6) medication (antibiotic prophylaxis and late seizure prophylaxis), (7) trauma service admission (blunt abdominal trauma), (8) intensive care unit admission (mild complicated traumatic brain injury), and (9) routine blood work (minor orthopedic surgery).
In this consensus study, a set of consensus-based quality indicators were developed that were informed by the best available evidence and patient priorities, targeting low-value trauma care. Selected indicators represented a trauma-specific list of practices, the use of which should be questioned. Trauma quality programs in high-income countries may use these study results as a basis to select context-specific quality indicators to measure and reduce low-value care.
使用质量指标已被证明可以改善创伤护理过程和结果。然而,迄今为止提出的创伤质量指标仅针对推荐实践的使用不足。像“明智选择”这样的倡议发布了需要质疑的实践清单,但很少适用于创伤护理,而且大多数都没有成功地转化为质量指标。
制定一套基于证据和患者知情的共识质量指标,以减少急性住院创伤护理中的低价值临床实践。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项为期 2 轮的研究和发展/加州大学洛杉矶分校(RAND/UCLA)共识研究,于 2021 年 4 月 20 日至 6 月 9 日进行,采用在线问卷和由 2 名独立主持人领导的虚拟研讨会。来自加拿大、澳大利亚、美国和英国的两个国际专家小组以及来自加拿大魁北克的当地利益相关者代表了参与创伤护理的关键临床专业知识,其中包括 3 名患者合作伙伴。
根据 4 项质量指标标准(重要性、支持证据、可操作性和可衡量性),专家小组成员对 50 项实践进行了 7 分制的李克特量表评分。
在 49 名符合条件的专家中,有 46 名(94%;18 名[39%]年龄≥50 岁;37 名男性[80%])至少完成了 1 轮,36 名(73%)完成了 2 轮。总共选择了 11 个质量指标,国际专家组选择了 2 个,当地利益相关者专家组选择了另外 3 个。选定的指标针对创伤护理以下方面的低价值临床实践:(1)初始诊断成像(头部、颈椎、脚踝和骨盆),(2)重复诊断成像(转移后 CT 和重复头部 CT),(3)咨询(神经外科和脊柱),(4)手术(穿透性颈部损伤),(5)血液制品管理,(6)药物(抗生素预防和迟发性癫痫预防),(7)创伤服务入院(钝性腹部创伤),(8)重症监护病房入院(轻度复杂创伤性脑损伤)和(9)常规血液检查(小型骨科手术)。
在这项共识研究中,制定了一套基于最佳现有证据和患者优先事项的共识质量指标,针对低价值创伤护理。选定的指标代表了特定于创伤的一系列实践,应该对其使用提出质疑。高收入国家的创伤质量计划可以使用这些研究结果作为基础,选择特定于上下文的质量指标来衡量和减少低价值护理。