| Literature DB >> 21694759 |
Rym Boulkedid1, Hendy Abdoul, Marine Loustau, Olivier Sibony, Corinne Alberti.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Delphi technique is a structured process commonly used to developed healthcare quality indicators, but there is a little recommendation for researchers who wish to use it. This study aimed 1) to describe reporting of the Delphi method to develop quality indicators, 2) to discuss specific methodological skills for quality indicators selection 3) to give guidance about this practice. METHODOLOGY AND MAIN FINDING: Three electronic data bases were searched over a 30 years period (1978-2009). All articles that used the Delphi method to select quality indicators were identified. A standardized data extraction form was developed. Four domains (questionnaire preparation, expert panel, progress of the survey and Delphi results) were assessed. Of 80 included studies, quality of reporting varied significantly between items (9% for year's number of experience of the experts to 98% for the type of Delphi used). Reporting of methodological aspects needed to evaluate the reliability of the survey was insufficient: only 39% (31/80) of studies reported response rates for all rounds, 60% (48/80) that feedback was given between rounds, 77% (62/80) the method used to achieve consensus and 57% (48/80) listed quality indicators selected at the end of the survey. A modified Delphi procedure was used in 49/78 (63%) with a physical meeting of the panel members, usually between Delphi rounds. Median number of panel members was 17(Q1:11; Q3:31). In 40/70 (57%) studies, the panel included multiple stakeholders, who were healthcare professionals in 95% (38/40) of cases. Among 75 studies describing criteria to select quality indicators, 28 (37%) used validity and 17(23%) feasibility.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21694759 PMCID: PMC3111406 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0020476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Study selection.
Characteristics of the 80 selected articles.
| Characteristic | |
|
| |
| Specialty | 55 (69) |
| General medical | 15 (19) |
| Health quality | 10 (12) |
|
| |
| Oncology | 10 (13) |
| Geriatric/end of life/long-term care | 10 (13) |
| Cardiology | 8 (10) |
| Prescribing drugs | 8(10) |
| Mental health/Parkinson/Memory | 6 (8) |
Characteristics of the first Delphi questionnaire.
| Characteristics | Reported | Present |
|
|
| |
| Outcome | 35 (69) | |
| Structure | 24 (47) | |
| Process | 41 (80) | |
| Other | 2 (4) | |
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|
| |
| Literature review | 48 (62) | |
| Guidelines | 20 (26) | |
| Focus groups | 17 (22) | |
| QI developed in another country | 11 (14) | |
| Preliminary preparation work | 26(32) | |
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|
| |
|
| 59 (32;146) | |
|
| 11–767 | |
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| |
| Validity | 28 (37) | |
| Feasibility | 17 (23) | |
| Importance | 13 (17) | |
| Agreement or reability | 12 (15) | |
| Other ( | 44 (55) | |
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| ||
| One | 51 (68) | |
| Two | 17 (23) | |
| Three | 7 (9) |
Percentage of studies that reported this item over the total number of studies (n = 80).
All percentages were calculated relative to the total number reported.
The total percentage may exceed 100% because some studies used more than one criterion.
included Previous work , Internal consensus , Results of first Delphi round, Development of new QI.
Characteristics of the Delphi procedure.
| Characteristics | Reported | Present |
|
|
| |
| Modified | 49 (63) | |
| Basic | 29 (37) | |
| Not specified | 2 | |
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| Between rounds | 19 (56) | |
| After the last round | 15 (44) | |
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|
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| |
|
| 3 (2;3) | |
|
| 2;4 | |
|
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| |
|
| 2 (2;3) | |
|
| 1;6 | |
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| |
|
| 20 (8;28) | |
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| 35 (78) | ||
| Internet | 10 (22) | |
| Telephone/Fax | 3 (7) | |
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| National | 60 (85) | |
| International | 11 (15) | |
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| |
| Rating scale + Open question | 47 (64) | |
| Rating scale | 22 (30) | |
| Open question (comments) | 1 (2) | |
| Other | 3 (4) | |
|
| 2 | |
|
| 1 | |
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| Median(Q1;Q3) | 1 (1;1) | |
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| Median(Q1;Q3) | 9 (5;9) | |
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| Median score+Percentage of agreement | 22 (35) | |
| Median score | 10 (16) | |
| Percentage of agreement | 9 (15) | |
| Rand method | 8 (13) | |
| IPR and IPRS method | 2 (3) | |
| Other | 8 (13) | |
| Not clear | 3 (5) | |
|
| 48 (60) | |
| Quantitative | 28 (58) | |
| Quantitative and qualitative | 19(40) | |
| Qualitative | 1 (2) | |
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|
Percentage of studies that reported this item over the total number of studies (n = 80).
All percentages were calculated relative to the total number reported.
The total percentage may exceed 100% because some studies used more than one criterion.
IPR, intrapercentile range; and IPRS, intrapercentile range adjusted for symmetry.
Practical guidance for using and reporting Delphi procedures performed to select healthcare quality indicators (QIs).
| Points to consider | Recommendations for planning and using the Delphi procedure | Recommendations for reporting the Delphi procedure |
|
| Define the study objective and what you expect of participantsAre the selection criteria appropriate for the study objective? If the objective is to develop a new QI and to evaluate whether an indicator has the appropriate characteristics for the concept being assessed, use validity as the selection criterion. If the objective is to evaluate the availability in medical records of information relevant to a QI, use feasibility as the selection criterion.Use a 1–9 Likert rating scale and define the steps on the scale clearly (e.g., indicate what the lowest and highest ratings mean)Allow the panel to comment and to add QIs.Define consensus and criteria for stopping the Delphi procedure | Study objective, method for QI selection, number of QIs in the first questionnaire, criteria for QI selection, how questions were formulated, and definition of a consensus |
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| Create a heterogeneous group of experts (healthcare professionals, informal caregivers, patients)Ask the potential panel participants about their willingness to participate; send an information letter explaining the Delphi procedure and benefits from participation; include an agreement form with the letter.Invite a very large number of experts, if possible from different countries. | Composition and characteristics of the panel, number of participants (diagram of participant flow), response rate for each round, whether special techniques were used to invite participants, and geographic scope of the Delphi procedure |
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| Use two methods (Internet and mail) to target as many people as possible and to increase the response rate | Report the method(s) used to send the questionnaires |
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| Construct the next questionnaires based on the results of the preceding rounds.Exclude QIs for which there was no consensus.Send each participant a personalized questionnaire with:• quantitative group results (median, minimal, and maximal ratings)• qualitative feedback: abstract of panel members' comments• the participant's own response to illustrate position versus the group | Flow of QIs with the QIs eliminated and added at each round.Method used to inform the participants of the results of previous rounds |
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| If agreement is reached among panel members: End the Delphi procedureWhen reaching a consensus is difficult or consensus is unclear, a physical meeting is recommended. | Report the number of rounds, whether a meeting was held (and if there was a meeting, what the participants did and who attended), duration of the Delphi procedure, results for each QI score and list of selected QIs.If possible, include a copy of the questionnaires in an appendix. |
Description of the Delphi panels.
| Characteristics | Reported | Present |
|
|
| |
|
| 17 (11;31) | |
|
| 3;418 | |
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|
| |
| Renown | 27 (43) | |
| Member of organization | 22 (35) | |
| Recommendation | 10 (16) | |
| Years of experience | 8 (13) | |
| Other ( | 18 (29) | |
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| Several | 53 (77) | |
| One | 16 (23) | |
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| |
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| 40(57) | |
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| Healthcare professionals | 38 (95) | |
| Informal caregivers | 25 (63) | |
| Methodologists / Researchers / Public health experts | 14(35) | |
| Managers | 11 (27) | |
| Patients | 8 (20) | |
| Other | 9 (22) | |
|
| 30 (43) | |
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| One | 1 (2) | |
| Two | 19 (48) | |
| Three | 14 (35) | |
| Four | 6 (15) | |
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| |
|
| 15 (10;18) |
Percentage of studies that reported this item over the total number of studies (n = 80).
All percentages were calculated relative to the total number reported.
The total percentage may exceed 100% because some studies used more than one criterion.
Percentages were calculated using 40 (number of studies with several stakeholders) as the denominator.