Sawyer Isabella, Harden Jeni, Baruah Rosaleen
The University of Edinburgh Edinburgh Medical School, Edinburgh, UK.
The University of Edinburgh Usher Institute of Population, Health Sciences and Informatics, Edinburgh, UK.
J Intensive Care Soc. 2023 Feb;24(1):40-46. doi: 10.1177/17511437221105777. Epub 2022 May 27.
The global pandemic caused by novel Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) has led to an unprecedented demand on critical care resources. The United Kingdom experienced its 'first wave' of Coronavirus-19 (Covid-19) disease in Spring 2020. Critical care units had to make major changes to their working practices in a short space of time and faced multiple challenges in doing so, including the challenge of caring for patients in multiple organ failure secondary to Covid-19 infection in the absence of an established evidence base of best practice. We undertook a qualitative investigation of the personal and professional challenges faced by critical care consultants in one Scottish health board in acquiring and evaluating information to guide clinical decision making during the first wave of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.
Critical care consultants in NHS Lothian working in critical care from March to May 2020 were eligible to participate in the study. Participants were invited to take part in a one-to-one semi structured interview conducted using Microsoft Teams videoconferencing software. Reflexive thematic analysis was used as the method for data analysis using qualitative research methodology informed by a subtle realist position.
Analysis of the interview data generated the following themes: The Knowledge Gap; Trust in Information; and Implications for Practice. Illustrative quotes are presented in the text and thematic tables.
This study explored the experiences of critical care consultant physicians in acquiring and evaluating information to guide clinical decision making during the first wave of the SARS CoV2 pandemic. This study revealed that clinicians were profoundly affected by the pandemic and the ways in which it changed how they could access information to guide clinical decision making. The paucity of reliable information on SARS-CoV-2 posed a significant threat to the clinical confidence of participants. Two strategies were adopted to ease mounting pressures - an organised approach to data collection and the establishment of a local community of collaborative decision-making. These findings contribute to the wider literature by describing health care professionals' experiences in unprecedented times and could inform recommendations for future clinical practice. This could include governance around responsible information sharing in professional instant messaging groups, and medical journal guidelines on suspension of usual peer review and other quality assurance processes during pandemics.
新型严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)引发的全球大流行对重症监护资源产生了前所未有的需求。英国在2020年春季经历了冠状病毒病19(Covid-19)的“第一波”疫情。重症监护病房必须在短时间内对其工作方式做出重大改变,在此过程中面临着多重挑战,包括在缺乏最佳实践既定证据基础的情况下,护理因Covid-19感染导致多器官功能衰竭患者的挑战。我们对苏格兰一个卫生委员会的重症监护顾问在SARS-CoV-2大流行第一波期间获取和评估信息以指导临床决策时所面临的个人和专业挑战进行了定性调查。
2020年3月至5月在NHS洛锡安从事重症监护工作的重症监护顾问有资格参与该研究。邀请参与者参加使用微软团队视频会议软件进行的一对一的半结构化访谈。采用反思性主题分析作为数据分析方法,使用基于微妙现实主义立场的定性研究方法。
对访谈数据的分析产生了以下主题:知识差距;对信息的信任;以及对实践的影响。文中和主题表中列出了说明性引述。
本研究探讨了重症监护顾问医师在SARS-CoV-2大流行第一波期间获取和评估信息以指导临床决策的经历。该研究表明,临床医生受到大流行的深刻影响,以及大流行改变他们获取信息以指导临床决策方式的情况。关于SARS-CoV-2的可靠信息匮乏对参与者的临床信心构成了重大威胁。采取了两种策略来缓解不断增加的压力——一种有组织的数据收集方法和建立一个本地协作决策社区。这些发现通过描述医疗保健专业人员在前所未有的时期的经历,为更广泛的文献做出了贡献,并可为未来临床实践的建议提供参考。这可能包括围绕专业即时通讯群组中负责任的信息共享的管理,以及医学期刊关于在大流行期间暂停常规同行评审和其他质量保证流程的指南。