| Literature DB >> 34130725 |
Meghan B Lane-Fall1, Athena Christakos2, Gina C Russell3, Bat-Zion Hose4, Elizabeth D Dauer5, Philip E Greilich6, Bommy Hong Mershon7, Christopher P Potestio8, Erin W Pukenas9, John R Kimberly10, Alisa J Stephens-Shields11, Rebecca L Trotta12, Rinad S Beidas13, Ellen J Bass14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The implementation of evidence-based practices in critical care faces specific challenges, including intense time pressure and patient acuity. These challenges result in evidence-to-practice gaps that diminish the impact of proven-effective interventions for patients requiring intensive care unit support. Research is needed to understand and address implementation determinants in critical care settings.Entities:
Keywords: Critical care; Ergonomics; Evidence-based practice; Human factors engineering; Hybrid effectiveness-implementation trials; Implementation science; Medical communication; Patient handoff; Patient safety; Postoperative period; Transition of care
Year: 2021 PMID: 34130725 PMCID: PMC8204062 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-021-01131-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1a Clinician participants and roles in the OR-to-ICU handoff. b OR-to-ICU handoff protocol
Fig. 2Study team structure and governance
Fig. 3Hybrid of Proctor’s implementation model and the social ecological model
Fig. 4Exemplar process map of OR-to-ICU handoffs
HATRICC-US outcome measures
| Outcome (type) | Rationale | Unit of analysis and approach to measurement | Frequency and timing of measurement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Co-primary outcomes | |||
| Fidelity (Imp) | Fidelity is a necessary precursor to effectiveness | Handoff-level; observations by site-based staff, count on a 10-point scale (quant), field notes (qual) | Monthly, Years 2-5 |
| New-onset organ failure (Eff) | Per-protocol handoffs enable clinicians to follow expected care practices and to anticipate and avoid postoperative deterioration | ICU-level; composite measure of AHRQ Patient Safety Indicators (PSIs) [ | Monthly, Years 2-5 |
| Secondary outcomes | |||
Feasibility (Imp) Acceptability (Imp) Appropriateness (Imp) | These “early” implementation outcomes will influence subsequent fidelity and will help in the interpretation of fidelity findings | Clinician- and ICU-level; AIM [ | 3 times: Year 1; within 2 months of implementation (Years 2-3); within 2 months of sustainment start (Years 4–5) |
| Sustainment (Imp) | Sustainment is the ultimate goal of the implementation effort | Handoff-level; characterized as fidelity over time (quant) | Monthly, Years 4–5 |
| Affordability (Cost; Imp) | Implementation cost is an important consideration for transferability of study findings | ICU-level; accounting-based cost analysis as described by Hoeft et al. [ | Within 2 months of implementation; within 2 months of sustainment start |
Teamwork (Eff) Professionalism (Eff) | Strong teamwork and professionalism are expected to result from protocol use | Handoff-level; field notes from trained site-based staff (qual) | Quarterly, Years 2–5 |
| Clinician satisfaction (Eff) | Clinician satisfaction is an early indicator of effectiveness | Clinician-level; surveys (quant); site visit findings (qual) | Annually, Years 1–5 |
| Clinician workload (Eff) | Workload influences clinicians’ EBP use; fidelity is likelier if workload is unchanged or lower | Clinician-level; NASA Task Load Index [ | Quarterly, Years 2–5 |
| Information omissions (Eff) | Per-protocol handoffs will show fewer information omissions | Handoff-level; direct observations* by trained site-based staff (quant) | Monthly, Years 2–5 |
| Adverse events (Eff) | Per-protocol handoffs include enable the prevention of adverse events by promoting shared team understanding of patients’ care | ICU-level; composite measure based on 10 routinely collected measures of care (AHRQ PSI 90 [ | Quarterly, Years 2–5 |
AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, AIM Acceptability of Intervention Measure [54], Eff effectiveness outcome, FIM feasibility of intervention measure [54], IAM intervention appropriateness measure [54], ICU intensive care unit, Imp implementation outcome, PSI patient safety indicator, qual qualitative measure, quant quantitative measure