| Literature DB >> 26293927 |
Brigit M Chesworth1, Michael J Leathley2, Lois H Thomas3, Christopher J Sutton4, Denise Forshaw5, Caroline L Watkins6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The implementation of strategies to monitor and enhance treatment fidelity is of paramount importance in trials of complex interventions. A recent framework published by the National Institutes of Health Behavior Change Consortium recommends addressing five areas of treatment fidelity, one of which is delivery of treatment. This study aimed to explore fidelity to treatment delivery of the ICONS intervention (a systematic voiding programme [SVP]). This included exploring the feasibility of a method to assess fidelity to treatment delivery and collecting preliminary evidence of the level of fidelity to SVP delivery in order to inform strategies for improving fidelity in a future trial.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26293927 PMCID: PMC4546169 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-015-0051-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Key quality indicators used to assess fidelity to treatment delivery as recorded on the clinical logs
| Stage | Key quality indicator | Definitions of components |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | VOIDING INTERVALa: | The |
| Is the voiding interval present and appropriately documented? |
| |
| 2. | PROPOSED VOIDING TIMESa: |
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| Are proposed voiding times present and documented correctly? |
| |
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| ||
| 3. | ACTUAL VOIDING TIMES – within schedule: | The |
| For how many proposed voiding times is the ‘actual voiding time’ documented and within 30 min? | The ‘gold standard’ for the ICONS intervention is that an | |
| 4. (a) | GOOD PRACTICE – Encouragement: For how many proposed voiding times is the answer “YES” documented in response to the question “Did you give encouragement?” | For each voiding occasion, healthcare staff are required to indicate on the clinical log whether they have undertaken a number of ‘best practice’ components of the regime. These include giving encouragement to the patient and asking them whether they are wet (if on prompted voiding regime). |
| 4. (b) | GOOD PRACTICE – Asking the patient if they are wetb: | |
| For how many proposed voiding times is the answer “YES” documented in response to the question “Did you ask the patient if they were wet?” |
aA clinical log was not examined further if it did not achieve this stage
bThis criterion refers to prompted voiding clinical logs only
Results for fidelity to treatment delivery in the ICONS trial
| Trial arm | Interventiona | Supported implementation |
|---|---|---|
| Number of clinical logs analysed | 396 | 320 |
| Number of patients | 40 | 31 |
| Percentage of total number of patients | 24.4 % (40/164) | 24.8 % (31/125) |
| Percentage of clinical logs according to type of regime: Prompted Voiding (PV)/Bladder Training (BT) | PV: 90.4 % | PV: 100.0 % |
| /BT: 9.6 % | /BT: 0.0 % | |
| STAGE 1: % with voiding interval present and correctly documented | 83.3 | 89.4 |
| STAGE 2: % with both voiding interval and schedule of proposed voiding times present and correctly documented | 38.9 | 31.9 |
| No. of clinical logs that achieved both Stage 1 and Stage 2 | 154 | 102 |
| For the clinical logs that achieved both Stage 1 and Stage 2: | ||
| STAGE 3: On average, how often was an ‘actual voiding time’ documented that was within 30 min of the proposed voiding time?b | 54.8 % | 56.0 % |
| STAGE 4a: On average, how often was encouragement documented as given? | 58.4 % | 57.5 % |
| STAGE 4b: On average, how often was it documented that the patient had been asked if they were wet?c | 57.9 % | 65.9 % |
aThis refers to sites which delivered the intervention only, and not the supported implementation package
bOccasions on which a clinically justifiable explanation was given for an early/late/missing actual voiding time were exempted from this analysis
cThis applies to Prompted Voiding clinical logs only
Fig. 1Bar chart to depict voiding intervals used by healthcare staff. The data in this Figure relate to clinical logs that achieved Stages 1 and 2 only