| Literature DB >> 25608684 |
Linda Richter-Sundberg1,2, Therese Kardakis3,4, Lars Weinehall5, Rickard Garvare6, Monica E Nyström7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many of the world's life threatening diseases (e.g. cancer, heart disease, stroke) could be prevented by eliminating life-style habits such as tobacco use, unhealthy diet, physical inactivity and excessive alcohol use. Incorporating evidence-based research on methods to change unhealthy lifestyle habits in clinical practice would be equally valuable. However gaps between guideline development and implementation are well documented, with implications for health care quality, safety and effectiveness. The development phase of guidelines has been shown to be important both for the quality in guideline content and for the success of implementation. There are, however, indications that guidelines related to general disease prevention methods encounter specific barriers compared to guidelines that are diagnosis-specific. In 2011 the Swedish National board for Health and Welfare launched guidelines with a preventive scope. The aim of this study was to investigate how implementation challenges were addressed during the development process of these disease preventive guidelines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25608684 PMCID: PMC4308005 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-014-0672-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1Guideline development model at the NBHW.
Strategies to address implementation challenges during development of the Disease Prevention Guidelines
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Guideline scope and purpose | Broad agreements and consensus about scope and purpose | Target audience involved in framing the guideline scope and purpose | Hearings with health-promoting organizations and politicians, professional groups |
| Political proposal preceded guidelines with health-promoting scope | |||
| Systematic and active involvement of stakeholders | Health-promoting hospitals networks used for piloting scope and identifying target population of Disease Prevention Guidelines | ||
| Formalized and structured development procedure | Using systematic methodology for identifying and defining the Disease Prevention Guidelines concepts and health questions | Formal criteria for initiating CPG-process | |
| Preparatory development process defining concepts and scope | |||
| Systematic methodology in defining guideline health questions and key concepts | |||
| Stakeholder involvement | Systematic and active involvement of stakeholders | Guideline development group included a wide scope of relevant professional groups and fields of knowledge | Experts representing: the CPG target area/s; methodology; communication; ethics; health economics |
| Health professionals representing: the CPG target area/s; different parts of the country; different patient groups; and different parts of the health care system | |||
| Involvement of stakeholder throughout the guideline development process | Meetings and collaboration with health-promoting organizations, politicians, and professional groups in the early phases of development | ||
| Regional conferences with health providers in the county councils | |||
| Rigour of development | Formalized and structured development procedure | Formalized CPG development procedure | Formalized procedure for defining purpose, scope and concepts |
| Formalized procedure for searching and assessing evidence | |||
| Formalized consensus procedure when there is a lack of evidence | |||
| Formalized procedures are suggested for monitoring, evaluation and follow- up of Disease Prevention Guidelines | |||
| Openness and transparency in Disease Prevention Guidelines development procedure | Transparency in methodology | Guideline development procedures explicit and overt | |
| Recommendations and the supporting evidence are clearly connected | |||
| Clarity of presentation | Openness and transparency in Disease Prevention Guidelines development procedure | Clear presentation of guideline development model | Description of the general Guideline development model is presented |
| Description of the Disease Prevention Guidelines development model and organization is presented | |||
| Methodology for collecting evidence is presented | |||
| Clear presentation of the Disease Prevention Guidelines recommendations | Experts in communication involved in the formulation of Disease Prevention Guidelines | ||
| Links between recommendations and evidence are clear | |||
| Applicability | Systematic and active involvement of stakeholders | Target users tested the hypothetical use of the Disease Prevention Guidelines recommendations | Health professionals hypothetical tested the use of the Disease Prevention Guidelines in clinical setting |
| Health care providers hypothetical tested the use of the Disease Prevention Guidelines in a health care management setting | |||
| Openness and transparency in Disease Prevention Guidelines development procedure | Barriers/facilitators for the Disease Prevention Guidelines application were presented | Facilitating factors for the implementation of the Disease Prevention Guidelines were sought by target users | |
| Monitoring, evaluation and update of Disease Prevention Guidelines | Barriers for the implementation of the Disease Prevention Guidelines were sought by target users | ||
| Formalized procedures for monitoring, evaluation and follow- up of Disease Prevention Guidelines are suggested | |||
| Editorial independence | Openness and transparency in Disease Prevention Guidelines development procedure | Autonomy of Guideline developers | The NBHW autonomous government agency |
| Formalized procedures for seeking and recording possible competing interests of all members of development group |
Figure 2Involved stakeholders in different phases of the guideline development.