Farrar Nicola, Conefrey Carmel, Bell Mike, Blazeby Jane, Burton Christopher, Donovan Jenny, Gibson Andy, Glynn Joel, Jones Tim, Morley Josie, McNair Angus, Owen-Smith Amanda, Rule Ellen, Thornton Gail, Tucker Victoria, Williams Iestyn, Hollingworth William, Rooshenas Leila
Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Canynge Hall, 39 Whatley Road, BS8 2PS, Bristol, UK.
National Institute for Health and Care Research Applied Research Collaboration West (NIHR ARC West) at University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust, Bristol, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2025 Apr 24;25(1):590. doi: 10.1186/s12913-025-12700-1.
De-adoption of healthcare involves stopping or removing provision of an intervention, usually because of concerns about harm, effectiveness, and/or cost-effectiveness. De-adoption is integral to upholding the quality and sustainability of healthcare systems, but can be challenging to achieve. Previous research conducted with healthcare decision-makers identified a desire for more national support to identify and implement de-adoption opportunities. The 'Evidence-Based Interventions' (EBI) programme was a de-adoption programme introduced in the English National Health Service (NHS), comprising national recommendations to guide provision of over 40 healthcare interventions. This study aimed to investigate commissioners' actions in response to this initiative, providing insights to improve the success and impact of future de-adoption programmes.
This was a qualitative study, employing in-depth, semi-structured interviews with NHS commissioners. Interviews were analysed thematically using the constant comparison approach. This work was part of a wider mixed-methods study, which aimed to investigate the delivery, impact, and acceptability of the EBI programme across the NHS.
Twenty-five interviews were conducted with 21 commissioners from 7 regions of England. Although commissioners were supportive of the ethos of using evidence-based criteria to guide equitable provision of care, they described inconsistent or limited adoption of EBI recommendations. Commissioners questioned the value and relevance of the recommendations, which often targeted interventions with pre-existing local policies. Local policies often set higher thresholds for accessing interventions, raising concern that adoption of national policies would raise activity to an unsustainable level given strained budgets. Interviews also revealed how implementation of national de-adoption recommendations was not a straightforward process, as they still needed to pass through multi-faceted local ratification processes, which required time, resource, and information/justification that was not always available, making implementation problematic.
This study is, to our knowledge, the first investigation of how devolved healthcare policymakers respond to national de-adoption recommendations. Our study highlights that local implementation of national de-adoption policies is not necessarily straightforward, by virtue of the fact that de-adoption concerns entrenched interventions for which devolved policies may already exist. It is therefore critical that national de-adoption initiatives provide guidance around how devolved policymakers should reconcile national recommendations with local policies and processes.
医疗保健领域的弃用涉及停止或取消某项干预措施的提供,通常是出于对危害、有效性和/或成本效益的担忧。弃用对于维护医疗保健系统的质量和可持续性至关重要,但实现起来可能具有挑战性。先前对医疗保健决策者进行的研究表明,他们希望获得更多国家支持以识别和实施弃用机会。“循证干预”(EBI)计划是英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)推出的一项弃用计划,包括指导提供40多种医疗保健干预措施的国家建议。本研究旨在调查专员们针对该倡议采取的行动,为提高未来弃用计划的成功率和影响力提供见解。
这是一项定性研究,对NHS专员进行了深入的半结构化访谈。访谈采用持续比较法进行主题分析。这项工作是一项更广泛的混合方法研究的一部分,该研究旨在调查EBI计划在整个NHS中的实施情况、影响和可接受性。
对来自英格兰7个地区的21位专员进行了25次访谈。尽管专员们支持使用循证标准来指导公平提供护理的理念,但他们表示对EBI建议的采用不一致或有限。专员们质疑这些建议的价值和相关性,这些建议通常针对已有地方政策的干预措施。地方政策往往对获得干预措施设定了更高的门槛,引发了人们的担忧,即鉴于预算紧张,采用国家政策会使活动增加到不可持续的水平。访谈还揭示,国家弃用建议的实施并非一个简单的过程,因为它们仍需经过多方面的地方批准程序,这需要时间、资源以及并非总是可用的信息/理由,从而使实施存在问题。
据我们所知,本研究是对下放权力的医疗保健政策制定者如何回应国家弃用建议的首次调查。我们的研究强调,由于弃用涉及已根深蒂固且可能已有下放政策的干预措施,国家弃用政策的地方实施不一定简单。因此,至关重要的是,国家弃用倡议应就下放权力的政策制定者应如何使国家建议与地方政策和程序相协调提供指导。