| Literature DB >> 27052329 |
Kathleen M McElwaine1,2,3,4, Megan Freund5,6,7, Elizabeth M Campbell5,6,7, Kate M Bartlem5,7,8, Paula M Wye5,7,8, John H Wiggers5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Primary care nurses and allied health clinicians are potential providers of opportunistic preventive care. This systematic review aimed to summarise evidence for the effectiveness of practice change interventions in increasing nurse or allied health professional provision of any of five preventive care elements (ask, assess, advise, assist, and/or arrange) for any of four behavioural risks (smoking, inadequate nutrition, alcohol overconsumption, physical inactivity) within a primary care setting.Entities:
Keywords: Prevention and control; Primary health care; Review; Systematic
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27052329 PMCID: PMC4823902 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-016-0409-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Intervention strategies to change health professional practicea
| Interventions | Definition |
|---|---|
| Distribution of educational materials | Published or printed recommendations for clinical care including clinical practice change guidelines, delivered personally or through mass mailings. |
| Educational meetings | Health care providers who have participated in conferences, lectures, workshops, or traineeships. |
| Local consensus processes | Inclusion of participating providers in discussion to ensure that they agreed that the chosen clinical problem was important and the approach to managing the problem was appropriate. |
| Educational outreach visits and academic detailing | Use of a trained person who met with providers in their practice settings to give information with the intent of changing the provider’s practice. The information given may have included feedback on the performance of the provider(s). |
| Local opinion leaders | Use of providers nominated by their colleagues as ‘educationally influential’. |
| Patient mediated interventions | New clinical information (not previously available) collected directly from patients and given to the provider. |
| Audit and feedback | Any summary of clinical performance of health care over a specified period of time. The summary may also have included recommendations for clinical action. The information may have been obtained from medical records, computerised databases, or observations from patients. |
| Reminders | Patient or encounter specific information, provided verbally or on paper, or on a computer screen, which is designed or intended to prompt a health professional to recall information, including computer-aided decision support. |
| Marketing | A survey of targeted providers to identify barriers to change and subsequent design of an intervention that addresses identified barriers. |
| Professional | Individual behaviour (distributing educational materials) and organisational interventions (local consensus processes). |
| Financial | Includes individual and organisational incentives and environmental restructuring (changing the available products). |
| Organisational | Includes input (changing skill mix), processes (communication), and effects (satisfaction of providers). Influencing the organisation of services, including the process of care (delegation of tasks), the structure of care (the follow-up system), and the content of care (health charts, flow sheets). |
| Regulatory | Includes legal (changes in patient liability) and social influence (peer review). |
| Patient resourcesb | Distribution or addition of resources that may aid discussions of risk factors, or allow previously unavailable options for preventive care, including flipcharts, educational resources for patients, and referral opportunities (e.g. quitlines). |
| Ongoing supportb | Email, telephone, or face-to-face communications which provided support and advice, responded to questions, or problems. |
aModified Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care group taxonomy of professional quality improvement strategies [82]
bIntervention strategies not covered by EPOC criteria
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 flow diagram
Intervention trials reporting change in routine provision of preventive care: January 1992–May 2014
| Author/year/country/trial design | Trial focus/care setting/sample size | Intervention strategies | Clinician group/data collection tool | Preventive care practices examined/outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| -Bakker et al. (2003) [ | -Smoking cessation for pregnant women. | IV: | Clinician target: | Ask: |
| -Chan et al. (2013) [ | -Relevant risks: Smoking, nutrition, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity | IV (early IV): | Clinician target: | Ask: |
| -Kaner et al., (2003) [ | -Alcohol | IV 1—Outreach Training | Clinician target: | Ask: |
| -Katz et al. (2004) [ | -Smoking cessation | IV ( | Clinician target: | Ask: |
| -Lennox et al., (1998) [ | -Smoking | IV: | Clinician target: | Ask: |
| -Moher et al., (2001) [ | -Coronary heart disease | Nurse targeted IV: | Clinician target: | Ask: *** |
| -Secker-Walker et al., (2000) [ | -Smoking in women (18–64 years) | -IV | Clinician target: |
|
*p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, ***p ≤ 0.001
RCT randomised control trial, IV intervention, C control, NR not reported, F/U follow-up, S smoking, N nutrition, A alcohol, P physical activity, NR not reported
aNot statistically significant at p < 0.05
bSignificance testing not conducted
cPaper reported results separately for this clinician target
dCorrectly reported from paper. Confidence intervals (1.3–2.0 vs 1.4–2.0)
eNote: only effect size results summarised. Group M and 95 % CI for IV and C groups at baseline, 6- and 12-month follow-up reported but not summarised in table due to space constraints
fWIC refers to Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants and Children
Summary of risk of bias in individual trials
| Intervention trial author, year, and trial design | Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) | Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) | Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) | Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Other potential sources of bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bakker | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Uncleara | Lowa | Unclear | High |
| Chan | High | High | High | Low | High | Low | High |
| Kaner | Low | Low | Low | High | Low | Unclear | High |
| Katz | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | High |
| Lennox | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | High | High |
| Moher | Low | Low | High | High | Low | Unclear | High |
| Secker-Walker, | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | High | High | High |
aSame risk of bias judgement for both classes of outcomes (clinician reported and client reported)