| Literature DB >> 32636288 |
Vanessa Abrahamson1, Wenjing Zhang2, Patricia Wilson2, William Farr3,4, Ian Male3,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The National Health Service (NHS) Long-Term Plan (2019) acknowledges that children and young people with suspected autism wait too long for diagnostic assessment and sets out to reduce waiting times. However, diagnostic pathways vary with limited evidence on what model works best, for whom and in what circumstances. The National Autism Plan for Children (2003) recommended that assessment should be completed within 13 weeks but referral to diagnosis can take as long as 799 days.This Rapid Realist Review (RRR) is the first work package in a national programme of research: a Realist Evaluation of Autism ServiCe Delivery (RE-ASCeD). We explore how particular approaches may deliver high-quality and timely autism diagnostic services for children with possible autism; high quality is defined as compliant with National Institute for Heath and Care Excellence (2011) guidelines, and timely as a pathway lasting no more than one calendar year, based on previous work. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: RRR is a well-established approach to synthesising evidence within a compressed timeframe to identify models of service delivery leading to desired outcomes. RRR works backwards from intended outcomes, identified by NICE guidelines and the NHS England Long-Term Plan. The focus is a clearly defined intervention (the diagnostic pathway), associated with specific outcomes (high quality and timely), within a particular set of parameters (Autism and Child & Adolescent Mental Health services in the UK). Our Expert Stakeholder Group consists of policymakers, content experts and knowledge users with a wide range of experience to supplement, tailor and expedite the process. The RRR is consistent with Realist And Meta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards (RAMESES) and includes identifying the research question, searching for information, quality appraisal, data extraction, synthesising the evidence, validation of findings with experts and dissemination. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval not required. Findings will inform the wider RE-ASCeD evaluation and be reported to NHS England. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04422483. This protocol relates to Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: developmental neurology & neurodisability; health policy; primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32636288 PMCID: PMC7342857 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037846
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1RE-ASCeD RRR stages. RE-ASCeD, Realist Evaluation of Autism ServiCe Delivery; RRR, rapid realist review.
Realist terminology
| Term | Explanation |
| Context | Refers to the ‘backdrop’ of interventions (in this case the diagnostic pathway), or anything outside the parameters of the intervention that might affect it, for example, shortages of community paediatricians. Context can also be understood as ‘any condition that triggers and/or modifies the mechanism.’ |
| Mechanism | The generative force that leads to an outcome of interest; usually hidden and context-sensitive. Mechanisms consist of intervention resources and how people respond to them. |
| Outcome | The outcome, intended or unintended, of a complex intervention such as timely assessment of possible autism in children. Outcomes can be initial, intermediate or final. |
| CMO configuration(s) | CMO configuring is a heuristic used to general causative explanations relating to outcomes. The process explores the relationship between an |
| Programme theory | This is the overarching theory of how a particular complex intervention may work; it draws on evidence, data and creative (retroductive) thinking to seek explanations of how, why and in what contexts an intervention works. The initial programme theory is tested and refined in an iterative process throughout the RRR. |
| Programme areas | These are areas, or themes, within the overarching theory, for example, GP involvement in the autism referral pathway. |
| MRT | An explanatory theory that can be used to explain a complex intervention, or aspects of it. While CMO configurations are specific to the intervention under investigation, and underpin the programme theory, MRTs are more generic and have wider application. |
CMO, Context-Mechanisms-Outcomes; GP, general practitioner; MRT, middle range theory; RRR, rapid realist review.
Figure 2Developing and refining the research question.
Figure 3Searching and retrieving information.
Abstract screening tool
| Ranking | Descriptions |
| Highly relevant | Primary focus is on diagnostic pathway whether the model is autism specific, autism/CAMHS, integrated neurodevelopmental pathway; AND |
| Relates to certain aspects of diagnostic pathway for example, skills mix OR | |
| Comments on implementation issues and/or contextual issues &/or outcomes OR | |
| Relates to quality or timeliness or cost-effectiveness of diagnostic pathway OR | |
| Relates to service user experience OR | |
| Relates to support services up to diagnosis OR | |
| Explores stakeholder perspective (commissioners, clinicians, other) up to diagnosis | |
| Probably relevant | Some description of diagnostic pathway but not the main focus |
| Little information on implementation, context or outcomes | |
| Limited reference to quality, timeliness or cost-effectiveness of diagnostic pathway | |
| Briefly refers to service user experience | |
| Briefly refers to support services up to (and/or post) diagnosis | |
| Explores stakeholder perspective (commissioners, clinicians, other) up to (and/or post) diagnosis | |
| Mostly not relevant but contains some ‘nuggets’ | |
| Not relevant | Does not meet above criteria for example, only focuses on post-diagnosis or adults |
CAMHS, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services.
Figure 4The screening process of primary search results. RAs, research assistants; RRR, rapid realist review.