| Literature DB >> 25064372 |
Kirsty Loudon1, Nancy Santesso, Margaret Callaghan, Judith Thornton, Jenny Harbour, Karen Graham, Robin Harbour, Ilkka Kunnamo, Helena Liira, Emma McFarlane, Karen Ritchie, Shaun Treweek.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical practice guidelines are typically written for healthcare providers but there is increasing interest in producing versions for the public, patients and carers. The main objective of this review is to identify and synthesise evidence of the public's attitudes towards clinical practice guidelines and evidence-based recommendations written for providers or the public, together with their awareness of guidelines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25064372 PMCID: PMC4119247 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Public, patient or carer beliefs, feelings, awareness, understanding, knowledge, attitudes, expectations and perceptions of clinical practice guidelines (and/or guidance). | Opinion pieces, editorials, narrative reviews and protocols. |
| | Public/patient involvement in guideline development. |
| User-testing of public/patient information tools derived from guidelines. | Public/patient-centred communication/information not related to guidelines or evidence-based recommendations. |
| Readability/understandability of public/patient-targeted information materials derived from guidelines. | |
| | Public health campaigns. |
| Communicating research results to public/patients within the context of a guideline. | Procedure-specific information (e.g. details of surgical operations and their consequences). |
| Public/patient versions of guidelines | |
| Computer interpretable guidelines for public/patients. | Informed consent for clinical trials. |
| | Public understanding of science. |
| Knowledge translation tools for public/patients derived from guidelines. | |
| English, Finnish, Norwegian, Spanish and German articles. |
Figure 1PRISMA diagram of flow of studies.From: Moher D, Liberati A, Tetzlaff J, Altman DG, The PRISMA Group (2009). Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses: The PRISMA Statement. PLoS Med 6(6): e1000097. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed1000097 For more information, visit http://www.prisma-statement.org.
Characteristics of studies and themes identified in thematic analysis of attitudes to clinical practice guidelines (19 included studies)
| Akl 2007 [ | To evaluate the use of symbols and words to present information on the strength of recommendations | 84 participants, 64.1% female, 48.6% graduate - part of community health education programme; USA | Evidence behind recommendations; format issues |
| RCT | |||
| Fair | |||
| Berry 2010 [ | To gain an understanding of public perceptions of Physical Activity guidelines put forward by a public health agency | 22 participants in five focus groups, 18 to 70 years; Type II diabetes or cardiovascular disease; Canada | Patient as individual; format issues |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Good | |||
| Carman 2010 [ | To determine how the concept of making health care decisions based on evidence of effectiveness could be translated into language that consumers would understand | 34 consumers in 4 focus groups, 57 interviews and 1558 employees, 18–64; USA | Patient as individual; Guidelines control care; Guidelines as rules; Guidelines for physicians; Communicate with physician;Trustworthiness |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Crocetti 2004 [ | To determine awareness and knowledge of infant feeding guidelines | 102 Primary female caregivers mean age 27 years; 34% African American; 64% completed high school; Maryland, USA | Patient as individual |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Good | |||
| Dykes 2004 [ | To evaluate a tool to drive patient centred evidence based recommendations to facilitate guideline adherence | 3 evaluators mean age 71 years, TV literate bedbound patients and carers (higher retirement income); Connecticut, USA | Self management; Format issues |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Poor | |||
| Eaton 2011 [ | To determine whether an intervention based on patient activation and a physician support tool was more effective than usual care to improve adherence to National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines (USA) | 4105 patients; primary care; mean age 52 control/54 intervention; 96% white; 59% female, southeastern New England, USA. | Communicate with physician, decision making; Self management; Patient as individual. Format issues |
| RCT cluster randomised | |||
| Good | |||
| Elad 2011 [ | To gauge acceptance of 2007 American Heart Association guidelines on antibiotic prophylaxis after being notified about change by doctor | 51 patients, 58 ± 17 yrs, 40% female with endocarditis; Israel. | Applicability of guideline information; Communicate with physician; Trustworthiness |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Good | |||
| Faruqi 2000 [ | To determine views, how to put into practice and disseminate clinical management of diabetes mellitus guidelines | 5-20 participants recruited through Diabetes Australia in four focus groups; Sydney, Australia | Self-management; Communicate with physician; Guidelines for physicians; Format issues |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Poor | |||
| Geiger 2001 [ | To determine awareness of dietary guidelines and test presentation formats | 40 men and women (25–45); Missouri, USA | Guidelines for physicians; Guidelines control care; format issues |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Poor | |||
| Julian 2010 [ | To determine knowledge and attitudes of women with menstrual disorders towards the use of evidence based clinical guidelines for their condition | 24 women (22–54) attending secondary care; Leicestershire, England | Guidelines as rules; Guidelines control care; Guidelines for physicians; Patient as individual; |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Good | |||
| Keenan 2002 [ | To examine knowledge and understanding and factors that influence knowledge - media/nonmedia/age and education | 400 adults over 18 years old, 51.8% college degree, 56% female; Minnesota, USA | Format issues |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| McFarlane 2012 [ | To determine public awareness of National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines and their implementation | 1675 respondents (70% female, 61% (45–74 yrs old), 17% health care professionals); mostly England and Wales, UK | Guidelines for physicians; Guidelines control care |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Michie 2005 [ | To evaluate knowledge of guideline and take up when using behaviourally specific language | 84 mental health users; 41–50 years; 51% women; London, UK | Format issues |
| RCT | |||
| Poor | |||
| Miroballi 2012 [ | To determine awareness of infection control guidelines | 1399 Cystic Fibrosis patients and their families, 38% patients, 62% family members; USA | Communicate with physician |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Mitchell 2004 [ | To determine knowledge of evidence based medicine and guidelines | 33 patients with colorectal cancer and 9 carers, 43 to 86 years; 66% male, many had not completed high school; Austin, Victoria, Australia | Communicate with physician |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Owen-Smith 2010 [ | To investigate patients’ and healthcare providers’ experiences of, and preferences for, implicit and explicit healthcare rationing | 56 participants (31 patients, clinicians, healthcare managers); morbid obesity and breast cancer; Bristol, UK | Guidelines control care |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Quintana 2001 [ | To explore how best to use the Internet to make evidence-based preventive health care guidelines available to physicians and consumers | 39 participants (22 men, 17 women, 56% men), 35 to 65 years, experience using the Internet; Canada. | Format issues; self management; Trustworthiness; evidence behind recommendations; Communicate with physician; Decision making |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Good | |||
| Royak-Schaler 2008 [ | To investigate patient-physician communication from the patient’s perspective about guidelines | 39, age 30–75 (mean age 55), 72% college education, breast cancer survivors, all African American; Baltimore, USA | Self-management; Communicate with physician |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Fair | |||
| SIGN 2011 [ | To investigate public awareness of Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) guidelines and their implementation | 239 respondents (66% female, 74% 45–74 yrs old, 61% had specific condition or disability); mostly Scotland, UK | Format issues; Evidence behind recommendations; Guidelines improve care; Guidelines for physicians |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Squiers 2011 [ | To assess how knowledgeable women were about the new recommendations in mammography | 1221 women, 40–74, who had never had breast cancer; USA | Format issues; Evidence behind recommendations; Guidelines control care |
| Cross sectional | |||
| Good |
RCT: randomised controlled trial.
Characteristics of studies and results for studies reporting awareness of clinical practice guidelines (17 included studies)
| Berry 2010 [ | To gain an understanding of public perceptions of Physical Activity guidelines put forward by a public health agency | 22 participants in five focus groups, 18 to 70 years; Type II diabetes or cardiovascular disease; Canada | Lack of awareness |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Good | |||
| Cameron 2007 [ | To determine Awareness and Knowledge of Canadian Physical Activity Guide (CPAG) guidelines, prompted and unprompted | 8892 adults aged 18 or older from Physical Activity Monitor; 52% female, 83% greater than high school education; Canada | 4% aware of any guidelines for physical activity; 37% prompted aware of CPAG |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Copeland 2005 [ | To determine awareness of written guidelines that define which conditions require exclusion from the Child Care Centre | 128 parents picking up children at Day Care Centre, 91% female, 69% African American; Baltimore City, USA | 61% aware of guideline |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Crocetti 2004 [ | To determine awareness and knowledge of infant feeding guidelines | 102 Primary female caregivers mean age 27 years; 34% African American; 64% completed high school; Maryland, USA | 77% aware of guideline |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Good | |||
| Faruqi 2000 [ | To determine how to put into practice and disseminate clinical management of diabetes mellitus guidelines | 5-20 participants recruited through Diabetes Australia in four focus groups; Sydney, Australia | Lack of awareness |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Poor | |||
| Geiger 2001 [ | To determine awareness of dietary guidelines and test presentation formats | 40 men and women (25–45); Missouri, USA | Lack of awareness |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Hong 2007 [ | To determine awareness and knowledge of dietary guidelines | 345 well people - 77% female; 46% <65 years. Randomly selected in one district Seoul urban population. | 32.2% aware of dietary guidelines |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Poor | |||
| Keenan 2002 [ | To examine knowledge and understanding and factors that influence knowledge - media/non-media/age and education | 400 adults over 18 years old, 51.8% college degree, 56% female; Minnesota, USA | 45% aware of dietary guidelines |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Mitchell 2004 [ | To examine knowledge of evidence based medicine and guidelines | 33 patients with colorectal cancer and 9 carers; 43 to 86 yrs old; 66% male; many had not completed high school; Austin, Victoria, Australia | No awareness |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Miroballi 2012 [ | To determine awareness of Infection Control guidelines | 1399 Cystic Fibrosis patients and their families; 38% patients, 62% family members in USA | 65% aware of guidelines |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Nash 2003 [ | To determine cholesterol guideline awareness | 1163 adults, 56% female, >40 years; Canada | 32% (94/290) aware of guideline |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Poor | |||
| McFarlane 2012 [ | To determine public awareness of National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines and their implementation | 1675 respondents (70% female, 61% (45–74 yrs old), 17% health care professionals); mostly England and Wales, UK | 79% (824/1040) aware of guidelines |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Owen-Smith 2010 [ | To investigate patients’ and healthcare providers’ experiences of, and preferences for, implicit and explicit healthcare rationing | 56 participants (31 patients, clinicians, healthcare managers); morbid obesity and breast cancer; Bristol, UK | Only 6/31 patients knew about NICE and what they did and 3 of these patients worked for health service. |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Roth 2010 [ | To investigate knowledge of guidelines and if is this linked to following guidelines | 1940 adolescents (11–15 yrs old); 49% female; England, UK | 11% of children knew about the recommendations. |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Royak-Schaler 2008 [ | To investigate patient-physician communication from the patient’s perspective about guidelines | 39 participants, 30–75 yrs old (mean age 55), 72% college education, breast cancer survivors, all African American; Baltimore, USA | Lack of awareness |
| Qualitative study | |||
| Fair | |||
| SIGN 2011 [ | To investigate public awareness of Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) guidelines and their implementation | 239 respondents (66% female, 74% 45–74 yrs old, 61% had specific condition or disability); mostly Scotland, UK | 64% (151/236) aware of guidelines |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair | |||
| Spence 2002 [ | To investigate awareness of Canada’s Physical Guide to Healthy Active Living | 2719 participants; 18-76+ years; Alberta, Canada | 20% (544/2719) aware of guideline |
| Cross sectional study | |||
| Fair |