Anderson Michael, Pitchforth Emma, Vallance-Owen Andrew, Mossialos Elias, Millner Paul, Fistein Jon
Department of Health Policy, The London School of Economics and Political Science, London, WC2A 2AE, UK.
College of Medicine and Health, University of Exeter, Exeter, EX1 2LU, UK.
J Patient Rep Outcomes. 2022 Sep 23;6(1):101. doi: 10.1186/s41687-022-00511-5.
The independent healthcare sector in the UK collects PROMs for several surgical procedures, but implementation has been challenging. We aimed to understand the enablers and barriers to PROMs implementation in the independent healthcare sector in the UK.
Between January and May 2021, we remotely conducted semi-structured interviews with hospital consultants, hospital managers and other clinical staff using a topic guide developed from an implementation science framework called the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF).
We interviewed 6 hospital consultants, 5 hospital managers, and 3 other clinical staff (1 nurse and 2 physiotherapists) across 8 hospitals. Common barriers included: the perception that PROMs are predominantly a reporting requirement rather than a quality improvement tool, absence of feedback mechanisms for PROMs data for clinicians, poor awareness of PROMs among healthcare professionals and the public, absence of direction or commitment from leadership, and limited support from hospital consultants. Common enablers included: regular feedback of PROMs data to clinicians, designating roles and responsibilities, formally embedding PROMs collection into patient pathways, and involvement of hospital consultants in developing strategies to improve PROMs uptake.
To support PROMs implementation, independent hospitals need to develop long-term organisational strategies that involve sustained leadership commitment, goals or targets, training opportunities to staff, and regular feedback of PROMs data at clinical or governance meetings. The primary purpose of PROMs needs to be reframed to independent healthcare sector stakeholders as a quality improvement tool rather than a reporting requirement.
英国独立医疗保健部门针对多种外科手术收集患者报告结局测量(PROMs)数据,但实施过程颇具挑战。我们旨在了解英国独立医疗保健部门实施PROMs的促进因素和障碍。
2021年1月至5月期间,我们使用从名为理论领域框架(TDF)的实施科学框架中开发的主题指南,对医院顾问、医院管理人员和其他临床工作人员进行了远程半结构化访谈。
我们采访了8家医院的6名医院顾问、5名医院管理人员和3名其他临床工作人员(1名护士和2名物理治疗师)。常见障碍包括:认为PROMs主要是一项报告要求而非质量改进工具;缺乏针对临床医生的PROMs数据反馈机制;医疗保健专业人员和公众对PROMs的认识不足;领导层缺乏指导或承诺;医院顾问的支持有限。常见的促进因素包括:向临床医生定期反馈PROMs数据;明确角色和职责;将PROMs收集正式纳入患者就医流程;医院顾问参与制定提高PROMs采用率的策略。
为支持PROMs的实施,独立医院需要制定长期的组织战略,包括持续的领导层承诺、目标或指标、为员工提供培训机会,以及在临床或管理会议上定期反馈PROMs数据。需要将PROMs的主要目的重新界定为独立医疗保健部门利益相关者的质量改进工具,而非报告要求。