| Literature DB >> 26563246 |
Marjo J M Maas1,2, Simone A van Dulmen3, Margaretha H Sagasser4, Yvonne F Heerkens5,6, Cees P M van der Vleuten7, Maria W G Nijhuis-van der Sanden8, Philip J van der Wees9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical practice guidelines are intended to improve the process and outcomes of patient care. However, their implementation remains a challenge. We designed an implementation strategy, based on peer assessment (PA) focusing on barriers to change in physical therapy care. A previously published randomized controlled trial showed that PA was more effective than the usual strategy "case discussion" in improving adherence to a low back pain guideline. Peer assessment aims to enhance knowledge, communication, and hands-on clinical skills consistent with guideline recommendations. Participants observed and evaluated clinical performance on the spot in a role-play simulating clinical practice. Participants performed three roles: physical therapist, assessor, and patient. This study explored the critical features of the PA program that contributed to improved guideline adherence in the perception of participants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26563246 PMCID: PMC4643538 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-015-0484-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Overview of the methods and results of a previously published trial (Van Dulmen et al. [18])
| Design |
| A cluster-randomized controlled trial was conducted among 10 communities of practice (CoPs) of Dutch physical therapists ( |
| Randomization and intervention allocation |
| CoPs showing interest in the program were invited to a plenary meeting in November 2009. They were informed that the study compared two educational strategies, and that both programs required an equal amount of time and effort. All physical therapists regularly treating patients with low back pain were eligible for inclusion. Included CoPs were randomly allocated to the PA group and the CD group resulting in six CoPs for the PA program ( |
| Interventions |
| PA is the process whereby professionals evaluate or are being evaluated by their peers and provide each other with performance feedback. The main difference between PA and CD is that in the PA approach the tasks were structured, with a focus on performance rather than discussion, and participant roles were pre-defined. In the CD approach the tasks were less structured with ample opportunity for in-depth elaboration and discussion, and participant roles were not defined. In PA and CD, participants worked on identical cases concerning problem content, but for PA these cases were adjusted to allow for performance of participants in different roles. In PA, written cases were not known in advance but were presented by a coach on the spot, simulating daily clinical practice. For CD groups, written cases were included in the program guide to allow for proper preparation, along with instructions and written questions to guide the discussion process. |
| Outcome measures |
| Outcomes were assessed at baseline and at six months. Primary outcome was knowledge and guideline-consistent reasoning, measured with 12 performance indicators using four vignettes that fully covered the patient profiles described in the guidelines. Changes in reflective practice were measured with the Self-Reflection and Insight Scale (Grant et al., [ |
| Results |
| Vignettes were completed by 78 participants (PA group |
Theoretical framework of the PA program design
| Theory | Underlying constructs used | Operationalization of constructs |
|---|---|---|
| Social constructivist learning theory [ | Contextual learning, collaborative learning, active participation, and knowledge construction to enhance attention, storage, and retrieval of knowledge from memory. | Presenting a variety of clinical problems that adequately reflect authentic clinical practice, accounting for the case-specifity of clinical competence. |
| Simulating the context of daily practice in a role-play accounting for the context-specifity of clinical competence. | ||
| Enhancing active participation of each participant by assigning pre-defined roles, and by using a performance based format. | ||
| Self-regulated learning theory [ | Applying metacognitive strategies to guide the professional development process. | |
| Self-assessment | Designing an improvement plan based on peer feedback. | |
| Conscious goal setting and action planning | Discussing the improvement plan with peers. | |
| Situated learning theory [ | Learning in the context of daily practice to bridge the gap between learning context and application context. | Delivering the program within communities of practice that share the same setting or the same interest. |
| Social cognitive learning theory [ | Enhancing the development of self-efficacy beliefs. | |
| Performing the new behavior and experiencing the consequences of that behavior (mastery experience). | Performing the new behavior individually, by reasoning aloud and demonstrating diagnostic and treatment skills relevant to the LBP guidelines. | |
| Observing the behavior of others and the consequences of that behavior (vicarious experience). | Observing a peer’s performance and providing individualized improvement feedback. | |
| Stages of change theory [ | Alligning implementation strategies to the stages of change. | Delivering the program within communities of practice. Peers are involved in the professional development process and are capable of tailoring feedback to stages of change. |
| Theory of planned behaviour [ | Changing attitudes and subjective norms toward the new behavior. | Introducing peers to the assessor perspective. In appraising a peers’ performance, peer assessors need to develop an understanding and a mutually accepted quality standard to deliver credible performance feedback. |
| Enhancing the development of self-effecacy beliefs. |
Peer assessment group characteristics
| Physical therapist characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Age mean (SD) | 40.4 (12.4) |
| Sex (male/female) | 17/27 |
| Working hours per week (SD) | 32.5 (9.6) |
| Treatment of patients with LBP per year | |
| <25 | 12 |
| 25-50 | 12 |
| 50-75 | 6 |
| 76-100 | 5 |
| >100 | 10 |
| Manual therapist | 8 |
| Years of experience (SD) | 16.5 (11.9) |
Results quantitative analysis
| Tasks | Subtasks | Mean | Median | Range | Sum |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study manual | Study PA procedure and guidelines | 5.09 | 6.0 | 10 | 195 |
| Perform in PT role | Perform clinical task individually | 8.05 | 9.0 | 10 | 322 |
| Receive peer feedback | 9.75 | 10.0 | 6 | 389 | |
| Receive external coach feedback | 8.48 | 9.0 | 10 | 331 | |
| Receive simulated patient feedback | 6.84 | 7.0 | 9 | 253 | |
| Receive written feedback and scores | 2.91 | 2.0 | 9 | 102 | |
| Perform in assessor role | Observe peer performance | 6.46 | 6.0 | 9 | 252 |
| Provide oral feedback | 5.75 | 5.5 | 9 | 230 | |
| Provide written feedback and scores | 2.58 | 2.0 | 4 | 44 | |
| Design change plan | Design and discuss change plan | 6.38 | 6.00 | 10 | 249 |
| Perform in patient role | Simulate patient problem | 3.26 | 3.0 | 7 | 98 |
Summary of results qualitative analysis
| PA Program tasks and subtasks | Perceptions of the PA program | Determinants of PA affecting perceptions | Facilitators for learning and change | Learning Processes | Learning Outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PA Program | Change in attitudes toward guidelines. | |||||
| Awareness of professional limitations. | ||||||
| 1 | Study manual | Update of knowledge. | ||||
| 2 | Perform task in PT role | Fear to expose professional competence. | Tight time schedule. | Training in the PT role. | Uncovers weakness. | Awareness of gaps in professional performance. |
| Reinforces strength. | ||||||
| Stimulates reasoning aloud, self-assessment and critical reflection. | ||||||
| Challenge of obtaining performance feedback. | Improved self-confidence in arguing for choices. | |||||
| Role play format. | Group safety | |||||
| 3 | Receive peer feedback | Peer feedback is concrete, concise, critical and personal. | Reveals strength and weakness in clinical performance. | Improved self-efficacy beliefs in managing LBPa patients. | ||
| Shows improvement areas. Reveals new reasoning perspectives and performance alternatives. | ||||||
| Varied group composition | ||||||
| Stimulates self-assessment and critical reflection. | ||||||
| 4 | Receive simulated patient feedback | Reveals how interventions are perceived from the patient perspective. | ||||
| 5 | Receive external coach feedback | External coach poses challenging questions, guides the PA process, facilitates giving and receiving feedback, provides non-judgmental, concise feedback, monitors the time schedule, maintains group safety. | Reveals new reasoning perspectives and performance alternatives. | |||
| Stimulates self-assessment and critical reflection. | ||||||
| 6 | Receive written feedback and scores | Stimulates self-assessment and critical reflection. | ||||
| 7 | Observe peer performance | Modeling peer performance. | Reveals new reasoning perspectives and performance alternatives. | Improved self-confidence in managing LBP patients. | ||
| 8 | Provide oral feedback | Training in the assessor role. | Triggers being concrete and concise in reasoning aloud. | Shared quality standards of performance. | ||
| Elicits discussion over criteria. | ||||||
| 9 | Provide written feedback and scores | |||||
| 10 | Design change plan | Guides improvement process. | ||||
| 11 | Perform task in Simulated patient role |
aLBP low back pain