| Literature DB >> 27053264 |
Akin Nihat1, Simon de Lusignan2, Nicola Thomas3, Mohammad Aumran Tahir2, Hugh Gallagher4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This study is a process evaluation of the Quality Improvement in Chronic Kidney Disease (QICKD) study, comparing audit-based education (ABE) and sending clinical guidelines and prompts (G&P) with usual practice, in improving systolic blood pressure control in primary care. This evaluation aimed to explore how far clinical staff in participating practices were aware of the intervention, and why change in practice might have taken place.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27053264 PMCID: PMC4823455 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008480
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Guidance introduction before and during the QICKD trial, including variation in BP target and proteinuria measures
| Year | Guidance | Body | Role | BP |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | National Service Framework for renal disease: Part 2 Chronic Kidney Disease | Department of Health | National guidance on managing CKD | Strict application of National guidance for Hypertension and/or Diabetes |
| 2006 | Royal College of Physicians and Renal Association | Included other Royal Colleges | Guidelines from joint learned societies to fill a gap in guidance | >140/90 mm Hg to an optimal BP of <130/80 mm Hg |
| 2006 | QOF CKD guidance | NHS Employers, then NICE | P4P for chronic disease management | <140/85—though people with comorbidities also subject to appropriate guidance (eg, diabetes) |
| 2008 | Early identification and management of chronic kidney disease in adults in primary and secondary care | NICE | Clinical Guideline No 73 (CG73), National evidence-based guidance | Systolic BP >140 mm Hg (target range |
ACR, albumin:creatinine ratio; BP, blood pressure; CKD, chronic kidney disease; DM, diabetes mellitus; NHS, National Health Service; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; P4P, pay-for-performance; PCR, protein:creatinine ratio; QICKD, Quality Improvement in Chronic Kidney Disease; QOF, Quality and Outcomes Framework.
*Key dates provided about when practices were recruited into the QICKD trial and when it ended, compared to the dates relevant guidance were published.
Conceptual framework listing main themes and subthemes derived from the process evaluation
| Main themes | Subthemes derived from focus group analysis |
|---|---|
| A. Improving the validity of the CKD register | A1. Stop diagnosing CKD on the basis of one low eGFR reading; instead, use two 3 months apart. |
| B. Explaining to patients they have CKD | B1. Tension between not hiding CKD diagnosis from patients and wishing to avoid causing excessive anxiety and social consequences of labelling. |
| C. Meeting CKD targets (BP, ACR) | C1. Few problems in adopting ACR as routine practice. |
| D. Impact on practice of the study interventions | D1. Base local practice on study guidelines. |
| E. Ideas for future practice | E1. Electronic management guideline prompt, that is, desktop icon, flagged up through pay-for-performance reminders (built into primary care computerised medical record systems)—more practical than paper-based. |
ACR, albumin:creatinine ratio; BP, blood pressure; CKD, chronic kidney disease; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.