| Literature DB >> 26169063 |
Jennifer Yost1, Rebecca Ganann2, David Thompson3, Fazila Aloweni4, Kristine Newman5, Afeez Hazzan6, Ann McKibbon7, Maureen Dobbins8, Donna Ciliska9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nurses are increasingly expected to engage in evidence-informed decision-making (EIDM) to improve client and system outcomes. Despite an improved awareness about EIDM, there is a lack of use of research evidence and understanding about the effectiveness of interventions to promote EIDM. This project aimed to discover if knowledge translation (KT) interventions directed to nurses in tertiary care are effective for improving EIDM knowledge, skills, behaviours, and, as a result, client outcomes. It also sought to understand contextual factors that affect the impact of such interventions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26169063 PMCID: PMC4499897 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0286-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Search strategy
| Electronic databases (inception until November 22, 2012) |
| • Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews |
| • Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects |
| • Health Technology Assessment Database |
| • MEDLINE (through PubMed) |
| • Scopus |
| • Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) |
| • Excerpta Medica (EMBASE) |
| • Web of Science |
| • Psychological Abstracts (PsycINFO) |
| • Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) |
| • Dissertation Abstracts International |
| Other sources |
| • Effective Practice and Organization of Care (EPOC) Register was searched by the EPOC Information Specialist and Trials Search Coordinator (May 22, 2013) |
| • Hand searches of the references lists of included studies |
| • Hand search of following key journals for the 12-month period prior to the date the electronic database search was conducted: Implementation Science, BioMed Central Health Services Research, Journal of Health Services Research & Policy, and Nursing Research |
| • Open Grey ( |
| • KT Plus ( |
| • Relevant conference proceedings, abstracts, and reports from the following were searched on June 14, 2013: |
| ○ the Research Transfer Network of Alberta ( |
| ○ KT Canada ( |
| ○ National Institutes of Health Science of Dissemination and Implementation conferences ( |
| ○ Joanna Briggs Institute ( |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Study design |
| Quantitative designs [ |
| Qualitative designs: All qualitative designs (e.g. descriptive, phenomenology, grounded theory). Studies needed to demonstrate that a specific qualitative methodology was followed (e.g. referencing a methodology, describing the analysis). |
| Mixed methods study designs. Studies needed to adhere to the inclusion criteria for both quantitative and qualitative designs. |
| Exclusion: Non-systematic reviews, cross-sectional studies, quantitative studies using post-test only, case reports, discussion papers, and editorials. |
| Setting |
| Inclusion: Tertiary care. |
| Exclusion: Studies conducted exclusively in primary care, long-term care, outpatient clinics, or community settings. |
| Participants |
| Inclusion: Nurses; registered nurses (RNs), APNs [e.g., clinical nurse specialists (CNSs), nurse practitioners (NPs)], licensed practical nurses (LPNs) or registered practical nurses (RPNs), and student nurses. When the implementation of the intervention involved nurses as part of a group of healthcare professionals and the study met all other inclusion criteria, the citation was included for client outcomes. |
| Exclusion: Studies in which the intervention was implemented solely among nurses functioning as LPNs, RPNs, or student nurses due to fundamental differences in training, education, and scope of practice. When the implementation of the intervention involved nurses as part of a group of healthcare professionals and the outcomes were group knowledge, skills, and behaviours and effects for nurses could not be isolated. |
| Interventions |
| Inclusion: Any KT intervention directed towards target participants and aimed at promoting nurses’ EIDM knowledge, skills, or behaviours, or affecting client outcomes. A list of KT interventions was compiled from similar systematic reviews conducted by the EPOC review group and the UK Health Technology Assessment Programme [ |
| Exclusion: Implementation of a guideline, which was not developed through a review of the best available evidence and/or accompanied in its implementation by an additional KT intervention. |
| Outcomes |
| Inclusion (quantitative): (1) EIDM knowledge, (2) EIDM skills, (3) EIDM behaviour, and (4) any client outcome. Nurses’ EIDM knowledge, skills, and behaviour were conceptualized using the Classification Rubric for Evidence Based Practice (EBP) Assessment Tools in Education framework [ |
| Knowledge: Facts and concepts about EIDM. Examples include: the ability to define the components of a clinical question, the ability to identify resources to search for the best available research evidence, or knowledge of critical appraisal concepts. |
| Skills: The application of knowledge. Examples include the ability to correctly construct a clinical question, appropriately conducted a search of the evidence, or accurately appraise the quality of evidence. |
| Behaviours: Behaviours reflecting the conduct of EIDM in nursing practice. Examples include identifying and constructing clinical questions, searching for the best available evidence, or critically appraise evidence. |
| Inclusion (qualitative): Contextual factors influencing the implementation of the KT intervention. |
Fig. 1Flow diagram. Yost et al. effectiveness of KT interventions
Summary of findings
| Outcome | Impact | Number of studies | Confidence in the findings (GRADE) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single educational intervention versus control | |||
| Engaging in EIDM behaviours | Evidence of effect is mixed | 1 non-randomized trial [ | Very low |
| Use of research evidence for practice change | Evidence of effect is mixed | 1 cluster RCT [ | Unable to be assessed; serious study limitations |
| Client outcomes | Evidence of no effect | 1 RCT [ | Moderate |
| Single educational intervention versus single educational intervention | |||
| Engaging in EIDM behaviours | Evidence of an effect for all outcomes | 1 RCT [ | Very low to moderate |
| Multifaceted intervention versus control | |||
| Engaging in EIDM behaviours | Evidence of no effect | 2 non-randomized trials [ | Very low to low |
| Use of research evidence for practice change | Evidence of effect for most outcomes | 2 RCTs [ | Very low to moderate |
| Client outcomes | Evidence of effect is mixed | 1 RCT [ | Low to moderate |
| Multifaceted intervention versus single educational intervention | |||
| Client outcomes | Evidence of effect is mixed | 1 RCT [ | Moderate to high; no serious risk of bias |
| Multifaceted intervention versus multifaceted intervention | |||
| Engaging in EIDM behaviours | Evidence of effect | 1 cluster non-randomized trial [ | Low |
| Use of research evidence for practice change | Evidence of effect is mixed | 1 RCT [ | Very low to moderate |
| Client outcomes | Evidence of effect is mixed | 1 cluster RCT [ | Moderate to high |
Fig. 2Meta-analysis: effect of educational meetings and use of a mentor for engaging in a range of evidence-based practice behaviours. Yost et al. effectiveness of KT interventions