| Literature DB >> 32690740 |
Hancy Issac1, Clint Moloney2, Melissa Taylor2, Jackie Lea2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Multifarious chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) guidelines have been published by local, national and global respiratory societies. These guidelines subsume holistic evidence based on recommendations to diagnose, treat, prevent and manage acute exacerbation with COPD. Despite the existing comprehensive recommendations, readmission rates and hospitalisations have increased in the last decade. Evidence to date has reported suboptimal clinical guidelines concordance. Acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPD) is a common hospital presentation due to varied causes such as infective exacerbations, worsening disease condition, medication non-adherence, lack of education and incomprehensive discharge planning. AECOPD directly and indirectly causes economic burden, disrupts health-related quality of life (HRQol), hasten lung function decline and increases overall morbidity and mortality. COPD being a multimodal chronic disease, consistent interdisciplinary interventions from the time of admission to discharge may reduce readmissions and enhance HRQol among these patients and their families. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This protocol adheres to the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology for mixed methods systematic reviews and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews reporting guidelines. Qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods studies will append this study to explore determinants of COPD guidelines concordance. Comprehensive three-tier search strategies will be used to search nine databases (COCHRANE, EBSCO HOST, MEDLINE, SCIENCE DIRECT, JBI, SCOPUS, WEB OF SCIENCE, WILEY and DARE) in May 2020. Two independent reviewers will screen abstracts and full-text articles in consonance with inclusion criteria. The convergent integrative method narrative review will contribute a deeper understanding of any discrepancies found in the existing evidence. Quality of the studies will be reported and Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) will be used as a priori to synthesis data. Identified barriers, facilitators and corresponding clinical behavioural change solutions will be categorised using TDF indicators to provide future research and implementation recommendations. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval is not required and results dissemination will occur through peer-reviewed publication. © 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: chronic airways disease; emphysema; protocols & guidelines; quality in health care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32690740 PMCID: PMC7375635 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-036060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Data synthesis table for using TDF (adapted from Atkins et al28 and Cane et al29)
| TDF for data synthesis | |||||
| Interdisciplinary clinical non-concordance behaviour | TDF domain | Guidelines uptake barrier | Guidelines uptake enablers | Behaviour change technique | Reported implementation and results |
| Lack of knowledge of guidelines, scientific rationale | Knowledge | ||||
| Lack of skills to care for patients with COPD, lack of interprofessional communication skills and assessment skills | Skills | ||||
| Professional identity, interprofessional boundaries, organisational identity | Social/professional role and identity | ||||
| Lack of self or confidence in clinical decision-making | Beliefs about capabilities | ||||
| Clinician and interdisciplinary staff attitude about COPD prognosis | Optimism | ||||
| Nihilistic views on causes, prognosis and management of COPD | Beliefs about consequences | ||||
| Clinician knowledge utilisation and provision | Reinforcement | ||||
| Lack of awareness, motivation and initiative to change and better care | Intentions | ||||
| Lack of goals to improve COPD care | Goals | ||||
| Difficulty recalling all treatment and management modality from COPD guidelines | Memory, attention and decision processes | ||||
| Lack of cues from COPD guidelines in workplace | Environmental context and resources | ||||
| Lack of clinician and multidisciplinary team cooperation | Social influences | ||||
| Nihilistic views of treating staff (smoking causes COPD) | Emotion | ||||
| Failure to abide COPD guidelines or related quality initiative | Behavioural regulation | ||||
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; TDF, Theoretical Domains Framework.
Summary of findings table to depict assessment of methodological quality of eligible studies (adapted from Aromataris and Munn34 and Munn et al36)
| ConQual summary of findings table | |||||
| Systematic review title: | |||||
| Synthesised finding | Type of research | Dependability | Credibility | ConQual score | Comments |
| Insert each synthesised finding and complete the columns per synthesised finding | |||||
Data extraction table for convergent integrated approach mixed methods systematic review (adapted from Lizarondo et al33)
| Domain/subdomain | Description |
| Reviewer name: | Name of reviewer and date of review |
| Authors | Authors of article |
| Journal year, number, record | Name of journal and its details |
| Type of study and aims | (Quantitative, qualitative, mixed) |
| Geographical and cultural context | Country of study |
| Methodology and results | Study design |
| Number and characteristics of participants | (Clinicians, nurses, allied health) |
| Phenomenon to lack of concordance (barriers and enablers) | TDF domains: (1) lack of knowledge of COPD-X guidelines, (2) lack of skills caring for patients with COPD, (3) social influences, (4) memory, attention and decision processes, (5) behavioural regulation, (6) professional/social role and identity, (7) beliefs about capabilities, (8) belief about consequences, (9) optimism, (10) intentions, (11) goals, (12) emotion, (13) environmental context and resources and (14) reinforcement (see |
| Guideline type | GOLD, COPD-X plan |
| Context and setting | Acute care, ED, inpatient care |
| COPD guidelines recommendations adherence | Studies reporting on spirometry, non-pharmacological and pharmacological, pulmonary rehabilitation, short-acting and long-acting inhaled bronchodilators, anti-inflammatory agents, inhaled corticosteroids use, inhaler technique and adherence, smoking cessation, influenza and pneumococcal vaccinations, COPD action, exacerbations promptly with bronchodilators, corticosteroids and antibiotics, comorbidities identification and management, palliative and end-of-life care, self-management education and primary and tertiary partnership care |
| Implementation method (ED and inpatient units) | Clinical pathways, proforma, bundle of care |
| Evaluation of implementation | Audits, reviews, reports |
| Readmissions, remissions or exacerbation within 30 days | Remission or readmission of disease due to inadequate care or discharge planning |
| Implications of guidelines | Implications of guideline in healthcare setting, patients and interdisciplinary staff |
| Sustainability measures | Frequency of audits, educational sessions, staff recruitment, change champions |
| Authors’ conclusion | Study conclusion by the author |
| Reviewer comments | Study conclusion and comments by reviewer |
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ED, emergency department; GOLD, global initiative for chronic obstructive lung disease; TDF, Theoretical Domains Framework.