| Literature DB >> 30772816 |
Jessica Reszel1,2, Sandra I Dunn3,2,4, Ann E Sprague3,2,4, Ian D Graham5,6, Jeremy M Grimshaw5,6,7, Wendy E Peterson4, Holly Ockenden3, Jodi Wilding2, Ashley Quosdorf4, Elizabeth K Darling8, Deshayne B Fell2,6, JoAnn Harrold2,5,9,10, Andrea Lanes3,6, Graeme N Smith11, Monica Taljaard5,6, Deborah Weiss3,6, Mark C Walker3,5,6,12,13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As part of a larger study examining the effectiveness of the Maternal Newborn Dashboard, an electronic audit and feedback system to improve maternal-newborn care practices and outcomes, the purpose of this study was to increase our understanding of factors explaining variability in performance after implementation of the Dashboard in Ontario, Canada.Entities:
Keywords: audit and feedback; case study; knowledge translation; maternal-newborn care; obstetrics; qualitative
Year: 2019 PMID: 30772816 PMCID: PMC6663061 DOI: 10.1136/bmjqs-2018-008354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Qual Saf ISSN: 2044-5415 Impact factor: 7.035
Figure 1Sample Maternal Newborn Dashboard homepage.
Definitions of performance and engagement used to classify hospital sites into four quadrants
| Variable | Definitions | Data sources used | Site classification process |
| Performance | High performance on KPIs (P+): *Of the KPIs that could be improved (red/yellow),>50% of KPIs improved to green between 1 April 2013 and 31 March 2016 and Green on ≥4 KPIs as of 31 March 2016 Of the KPIs that could be improved (red/yellow), ≤50% of KPIs improved to green between 1 April 2013 and 31 March 2016 and Green on ≤3 KPIs as of 31 March 2016 |
Provincial registry data | Two analysts independently classified each of the 14 sites as ‘high’ or ‘low’ performance. |
| Engagement | High engagement with Dashboard (E+): Provided examples of use of the Dashboard and targeted efforts to facilitate clinical practice change on the KPIs Provided limited examples of use of the Dashboard and targeted efforts to facilitate clinical practice change on the KPIs |
Interviews Focus groups Hospital documents Observations Photographs Field notes Interpretive summaries | Two analysts independently classified each of the 14 sites as ‘high’ or ‘low’ engagement. |
*With the exception of one site who was already green on six KPIs in April 2013. This site was recruited to provide the team with a case who had been successful with sustaining a high level of performance on the KPIs over a 3-year period.
E, engagement with Dashboard; KPI, key performance indicator; P, performance on KPIs.
Characteristics of hospitals in each quadrant
| Quadrant 1 | Quadrant 2 | Quadrant 3 | Quadrant 4 | |
| Level of care—n (%)¶ | ||||
| Low-risk | 2 (29) | 2 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| High-risk | 5 (71) | 0 (0) | 3 (100) | 2 (100) |
| Birth volume/year—n (%) | ||||
| | 2 (29) | 2 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| 501–2499 | 3 (43) | 0 (0) | 1 (33) | 1 (50) |
| | 2 (29) | 0 (0) | 2 (67) | 1 (50) |
| Method of data entry into provincial registry—n (%) | ||||
| Manual | 5 (71) | 1 (50) | 2 (67) | 1 (50) |
| Upload from EHR | 2 (29) | 1 (50) | 1 (33) | 1 (50) |
| Of the KPIs that were red/yellow in April 2013, percent that changed to green by March 2016—mean (SD) | 72 (36.7) | 63 (4.7) | 26 (6.6) | 0 (0) |
| Number of KPIs green in March 2016 (out of 6)—mean (SD) | 5 (0.8) | 4.5 (0.7) | 2.3 (0.6) | 2 (1.4) |
*Quadrant 1: High performance, high engagement.
†Quadrant 2: High performance, low engagement.
‡Quadrant 3: Low performance, high engagement.
§Quadrant 4: Low performance, low engagement.
¶Low-risk includes level I hospitals; high-risk includes level II and III hospitals; level of care defined as per the Provincial Council for Maternal and Child Health.37
**Including one site who was green on all six KPIs at baseline.
E, engagement with Dashboard; EHR, electronic health record; KPI, key performance indicator; P, performance on KPIs.
Themes by quadrant
| Quadrant 1 | Quadrant 2 | Quadrant 3 | Quadrant 4 | |
| Interdisciplinary collaboration and accountability | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Application of formal change strategies | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ | ✗ |
| Team trust and use of evidence and data | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Alignment with organisational priorities and support | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ | ✗ |
✓Overall, these factors were present at organisations within this quadrant and were perceived to facilitate Dashboard KPI improvements.
✗Overall, these factors were lacking at organisations within this quadrant and were perceived to be barriers to Dashboard KPI improvements.
E, engagement with Dashboard; KPI, key performance indicator; P, performance on KPIs.
Participant quotes by theme to illustrate barriers and facilitators
| Facilitators | Barriers | |
| Interdisciplinary collaboration and accountability | We did collaborate with our obstetric group to say these are our standards and these are our clinical indications for inductions…So it’s become a very good collaboration between nursing staff, team leaders, triage nurses, as well as myself (manager). The long-term plan for this is to move it away from myself and move it to the team leaders and then to the triage nurses so that it has a sustainable approach to it moving forward. (Q1:P+/E+, Site N) | It’s hard to quantify whose numbers they are, who the patient belongs to. So you have patients that you see in your office and you make plans for their labour and delivery or C-section, etc. and those are your patients from the office. But then when you’re on call, you react to what comes in the door. And so it’s a bit tricky to own any stats because you’re being given the information based on how you perform when you’re on call. (Q3:P-/E+, Site M) |
| Application of formal change strategies | This is the first organization I’d been in who has really engaged in [name of change framework] from boardroom to bedside and that’s extremely important. The concept of [name of change framework] is a philosophy. It’s a performance management methodology that really transforms your culture. (Q1:P+/E+, Site B) | Well, it’s (the process) a bit random, to be quite honest…I can’t recall having a discussion to say, okay, here’s our KPIs, here’s how we’re doing, let’s decide—this is going to be a goal for the next year. We haven’t had those conversations, so that’s why I say it’s a bit random. (Q2:P+/E-, Site A) |
| Team trust and use of evidence and data | If you start at the beginning, they trust the process on how they get the data in, right?… They understand that the nurse looking after the patient is the right person to enter the data accurately…They trust the (registry) data quality reports that they use… and they trust the Dashboard in that there is a mechanism in the Dashboard to drill down into it. They’re able to do a little audit and through that process, make changes if need be but also when everything comes up and it’s all been entered accurately by chart audit, they trust the Dashboard. So all of those things have built up a trust and it didn’t come overnight, right? (Q1:P+/E+, Site D) | When it looked like we were going to look at it (the Dashboard data) more seriously, then came the questions. Well how do I believe you? I see how the data is entered. I don’t really have confidence in the data. So you could call it red. You could call it purple, it doesn’t really mean anything. (Q4:P-/E-, Site J) |
| Alignment with organisational priorities and support | Our induction strategy became a priority for two reasons. Number one, because we were performing poorly on the metric (KPI 6), but number two, it was significantly affecting our patient flow and our clinical flow because our inductions were very much unregulated. Some days we would have nine, other days we’d have zero, which is very hard because of staffing issues that we were facing at the time. So it (KPI 6) became a programme priority. (Q1:P+/E+, Site N) | This may sound like an excuse, but we are a smaller centre and we don’t have the availability of operating room time perhaps quite as frequently as a tertiary care centre or a much larger centre that has many more operating rooms and many more anaesthetists and so on. (Q2:P+/E-, Site A) |
E, engagement with Dashboard; KPI, key performance indicator; P, performance on KPIs.