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参与健康指南制定的指导意见:一项范围综述

Guidance for engagement in health guideline development: A scoping review.

作者信息

Petkovic Jennifer, Riddle Alison, Lytvyn Lyubov, Khabsa Joanne, Akl Elie A, Welch Vivian, Magwood Olivia, Atwere Pearl, Graham Ian D, Grant Sean, John Denny, Katikireddi Srinivasa Vittal, Langlois Etienne V, Mustafa Reem A, Todhunter-Brown Alex, Schünemann Holger, Stein Airton T, Concannon Thomas W, Tugwell Peter

机构信息

Bruyère Research Institute University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada.

School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine University of Ottawa Marmora Ontario Canada.

出版信息

Campbell Syst Rev. 2024 Nov 25;20(4):e70006. doi: 10.1002/cl2.70006. eCollection 2024 Dec.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Health guideline developers engage with interested people and groups to ensure that guidelines and their recommendations are relevant and useful to those who will be affected by them. These 'interest-holders' include patients, payers/purchasers of health services, payers of health research, peer review editors, product makers, programme managers, policymakers, providers, principal investigators, and the public. The Guidelines International Network (GIN) and McMaster University Guideline Development Checklist describes 146 steps of the guideline process organized into 18 topics. While one topic focuses on engagement, it does not describe how to engage with interest-holders. In addition, interest-holder input could be sought throughout the guideline development process. This scoping review is part of a series of four related reviews. The three other reviews address barriers and facilitators to engagement in guideline development, managing conflicts of interest in guideline development, and assessing the impact of interest-holder engagement on guideline development. The four reviews will inform the development of guidance for multi-interest-holder engagement in guideline development; the GIN-McMaster Guideline Development Checklist Extension for Engagement.

OBJECTIVES

The objective of this scoping review is to identify, describe, and summarise existing guidance and methods for multi-interest-holder engagement throughout the health guideline development process.

SEARCH METHODS

We conducted one comprehensive search for studies of engagement in guidelines to meet the inclusion criteria of one or more of the four systematic reviews in this series. We searched MEDLINE (OVID), CINAHL (EBSCO), EMBASE (OVID), PsycInfo (OVID) and SCOPUS databases up to September 2022. We did not include limits for date, study design, or language. We searched websites of agencies and organizations that engage interest-holder groups, such as the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), CIHR Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR), National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Be Part of Research, Guidelines International Network (G-I-N), the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, and the PatientCentred Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI). We handsearched the websites of guideline producing agencies. We solicited additional grey literature from the members of the MuSE Consortium.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Studies were included in this review if they reported on engagement of any of our identified groups, patients, payers/funders of research, payers/purchasers of health services, policymakers, programme managers, providers, principal investigators/researchers, peer review editors, product makers in the development of a health guideline. Titles and abstracts of identified citations were screened independently, in duplicate. The full text of potentially relevant papers were screened for eligibility into one or more of the four reviews in the series. Screening was done independently, by two reviewers. The team held weekly meetings with all reviewers involved in screening to discuss and resolve conflicts.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Two reviewers extracted relevant data into a pilot-tested data extraction form using Excel. We used the GIN-McMaster guideline development checklist as a framework for extracting the available guidance for each of our identified interest-holder groups throughout the development process. We presented descriptive statistics of the number of papers reporting guidance for each groups across the steps of the guideline process. We synthesized the relevant text using a qualitative meta-summary approach.

MAIN RESULTS

We included 16 papers (from 17 reports). These papers were from Australia, Denmark, the Netherlands, the UK, and the USA, and eight papers were international (countries not specified). The papers provided guidance for at least one of our interest-holder groups for at least one stage of guideline development. We mapped this guidance to the GIN-McMaster Guideline Development Checklist to identify the available guidance for each of our interest-holder groups across all stages of the guideline development process. Guidance was available for patient engagement in 15 of the 16 papers. At least two papers provided guidance for each of the 18 topics of the GIN-McMaster Guideline Development Checklist. For healthcare providers, 9 papers provided guidance for their engagement across 10 of the 18 guideline development topics. Guidance for engaging with the public was provided for 14 of the 18 topics and reported in 4 of our included papers. For payers/purchasers of health services, policymakers, product makers, programme managers, and principal investigators, 2-3 papers provided guidance for these groups across 4-7 topics of the GIN-McMaster checklist. We did not identify any specific guidance for payers of health research or for editors of peer-reviewed journals.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Guidance for interst-holder engagement in guidelines is available but has focused primarily on patients. We will utilize the guidance identified in this scoping review to inform the GIN-McMaster Guideline Development Checklist Extension for engagement. Combined with the information obtained from the other systematic reviews in this series, we will address the gaps in guidance for the other identified interest-holder groups.

摘要

背景

健康指南制定者与相关人员和团体合作,以确保指南及其建议对受其影响的人群具有相关性和实用性。这些“利益相关者”包括患者、卫生服务的支付方/购买方、卫生研究的资助方、同行评审编辑、产品制造商、项目经理、政策制定者、提供者、主要研究者以及公众。国际指南网络(GIN)和麦克马斯特大学指南制定清单描述了指南制定过程中的146个步骤,分为18个主题。虽然有一个主题关注参与,但并未描述如何与利益相关者进行互动。此外,在指南制定过程的各个阶段都可以寻求利益相关者的意见。本范围综述是四项相关综述系列的一部分。其他三项综述分别探讨了指南制定中参与的障碍和促进因素、指南制定中利益冲突的管理以及评估利益相关者参与对指南制定的影响。这四项综述将为多利益相关者参与指南制定的指导方针制定提供参考,即《GIN - 麦克马斯特指南制定清单参与扩展版》。

目的

本范围综述的目的是识别、描述和总结在整个健康指南制定过程中多利益相关者参与的现有指导方针和方法。

搜索方法

我们进行了一次全面搜索,以查找符合本系列四项系统评价中一项或多项纳入标准的指南参与研究。我们检索了截至2022年9月的MEDLINE(OVID)、CINAHL(EBSCO)、EMBASE(OVID)、PsycInfo(OVID)和SCOPUS数据库。我们没有设置日期、研究设计或语言限制。我们搜索了与利益相关者团体互动的机构和组织的网站,如医疗保健研究与质量局(AHRQ)、加拿大卫生研究院患者导向研究战略(SPOR)、国家卫生与保健研究所(NIHR)参与研究、国际指南网络(G - I - N)、国家卫生与保健卓越研究所以及患者为中心的结果研究所(PCORI)。我们手动搜索了指南制定机构的网站。我们向MuSE联盟成员征集了更多灰色文献。

入选标准

如果研究报告了我们确定的任何一个团体(患者、研究的支付方/资助方、卫生服务的支付方/购买方、政策制定者、项目经理、提供者、主要研究者/研究人员、同行评审编辑、产品制造商)在健康指南制定过程中的参与情况,则纳入本综述。对识别出的文献的标题和摘要进行独立的重复筛选。对潜在相关论文的全文进行筛选,以确定是否符合该系列四项综述中一项或多项的纳入标准。筛选由两名评审员独立进行。团队每周与所有参与筛选的评审员开会,讨论并解决冲突。

数据收集与分析

两名评审员使用Excel将相关数据提取到经过预测试的数据提取表中。我们以GIN - 麦克马斯特指南制定清单为框架,在整个指南制定过程中为我们确定的每个利益相关者团体提取可用的指导方针。我们展示了在指南制定过程的各个步骤中报告各团体指导方针的论文数量的描述性统计数据。我们使用定性元总结方法对相关文本进行了综合。

主要结果

我们纳入了16篇论文(来自17份报告)。这些论文来自澳大利亚、丹麦、荷兰、英国和美国,8篇论文为国际性论文(未指明国家)。这些论文为我们至少一个利益相关者团体在指南制定的至少一个阶段提供了指导方针。我们将这些指导方针映射到GIN - 麦克马斯特指南制定清单,以确定在指南制定过程的所有阶段为我们每个利益相关者团体提供的可用指导方针。16篇论文中有15篇提供了患者参与的指导方针。至少两篇论文为GIN - 麦克马斯特指南制定清单的18个主题中的每个主题提供了指导方针。对于医疗保健提供者,9篇论文为他们在18个指南制定主题中的10个主题的参与提供了指导方针。为18个主题中的14个主题提供了与公众互动的指导方针,在我们纳入的4篇论文中有所报道。对于卫生服务的支付方/购买方、政策制定者、产品制造商、项目经理和主要研究者,2 - 3篇论文为这些团体在GIN - 麦克马斯特清单的4 - 7个主题中提供了指导方针。我们没有找到针对卫生研究资助方或同行评审期刊编辑的任何具体指导方针。

作者结论

有关于指南中利益相关者参与的指导方针,但主要集中在患者身上。我们将利用本范围综述中确定的指导方针为《GIN - 麦克马斯特指南制定清单参与扩展版》提供参考。结合本系列其他系统评价获得的信息,我们将填补针对其他确定的利益相关者团体的指导方针空白。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/b335/11586780/aa25eedbdca6/CL2-20-e70006-g004.jpg

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