| Literature DB >> 35232391 |
Xian-Liang Liu1, Tao Wang1, Jing-Yu Tan1, Simon Stewart2,3, Raymond J Chan4, Sabina Eliseeva1,5, Mary Janice Polotan1,5, Isabella Zhao6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sustainability of adherence to clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) represents an important indicator of the successful implementation in the primary care setting. AIM: To explore the sustainability of primary care providers' adherence to CPGs after receiving planned guideline implementation strategies, activities, or programmes.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Clinical practice guidelines; Healthcare professionals; Primary care; Sustainability
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35232391 PMCID: PMC8889781 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-022-01641-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Prim Care ISSN: 2731-4553
MESH terms and keywords
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Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for search results
Characteristics of included studies
| First author, year, setting, funding source | Study design | Participants ( | Healthcare professional type | Intervention | Sustainability timeframe | Sustainability outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention group(s) | Control group(s) | ||||||
| Spitaels D, 2019, Belgium, NA [ | Non-randomized and controlled intervention study | Participated: Intervention group: 426 GPs Control group: 798 GPs Completed the outcome questionnaire: Intervention group: 73 GPs Control group: 103 GPs | GPs | A 20-min, face-to-face educational outreach visit, with composed of two-components: face to face meeting about the evidence-based knee osteoarthritis management and a printed leaflet was provided for the GPs at the end of the educational visit. | Not visited by academic detailers. | Six months post-intervention | (2) Quality indicator adherence: no significant change between the control and intervention group. |
| Presseau J, 2018, England, Diabetes UK [ | Two-arm cluster RCT | Randomized: Intervention group: 22 primary care practices (153 GPs, nurses, and HCAs) Control group: 22 primary care practices (172 GPs, nurses, and HCAs) Completed: Intervention group: 22 primary care practices Control group: 20 primary care practices | GPs, nurses and healthcare assistants | Implementation intervention used behaviour change theory (e.g., SCT, Health Action Process Approach) and behaviour change techniques to develop the intervention, and involved outreach visits, to allow healthcare professionals to dedicate 90 min together to discuss the targeted healthcare behaviors, provided with materials to pre-identify barriers and solutions, short videos using practice-based examples, common barriers and possible solutions. | No intervention was provided and provided materials to control group at the end of the study. | 12 months follow-up | Electronic medical records: blood pressure and glycaemic control prescribing, physical activity and nutrition advice: no significant differences between the two groups were found; Patient survey: diabetes health education and foot examination |
| Pinto D, 2018, Portugal, National Health Institute [ | Parallel, open, superiority, cluster RCT | Intervention group: 19 clusters with 120 participating physicians Control group: 19 clusters with 119 participating physicians | Family physicians | During a 6-month period, 3 educational outreach visits, 3 guidelines were chosen for dissemination, each educational outreach visit was focused on one guideline, last from 15 to 20 min. Each visit distributed a point of care summary, and a brochure was utilized as a visual aid. | Passive dissemination: by the publication on website. | 18 months after the intervention. | |
| Wang H-YJ, 2018, USA, NA [ | Two-arm cluster RCT | Randomized: Intervention group:13 practices, 246 patients Control group: 12 practices, 233 patients Completed: Intervention group: 13 practices, 195 patients Control group: 12 practices, 176 patients | Primary care physicians | Used social cognitive theory (SCT) to develop the intervention. Consisted of three components: (1) a printed communication guide, (2) 2 in-office, structured training with patients, each training lasted approximately 45 min and the second training session was 4 to 6 months later after the first session, and (3) auxiliary materials. | No intervention materials except the local free/low-cost screening information sheet | 12-month follow-up | |
| Trietsch J, 2017, Netherlands, ZonMw [ | Two-arm cluster RCT | Arm A: 10 LQICs, 39 practices (86 GPs) Arm B: 11 LQICs, 49 practices (122 GPs) | GPs | Audit and feedback with peer review in LQICs: each GP received performance feedback report, each group planned two meetings for each clinical topic (three topics in total from five different topics), test ordering and prescribing meeting, a total of six meetings. Each meeting: 90 to 120 min. Feedback reports were generated from diagnostic tests and prescriptions. | Same with Arm A on different topics (three topics in total from five different topics). | 9 months after meetings | |
| van der Velden AW, 2017, Netherlands, ZonMw [ | Open, pragmatic, cluster RCT | Randomized: Antibiotic intervention group: 45 practices Control group: 41 practices Completed (second year): Antibiotic intervention group: 44 practices Control group: 40 practices | GPs | Multifaceted program aims to improve antibiotic use for RTIs was consisted of GP education, audit/feedback and patient information, two 4-week registration of RITs; Educational meeting: A meeting discussed the antibiotic prescribing guidelines and antibiotic-related problems with all GPs working in that primary care center in one session (60 to 90 min); An improvement plan was defined on optimize antibiotic prescribing after the educational meeting. Patient booklets: symptomatic treatment, natural course and alarm symptoms. Feedback: all antibiotics dispensed in the year after the GPs meeting. | Usual practices | Two years after the program | |
| Noto H, 2016, Japan, NA [ | Open cluster-RCT | Randomized: Intervention group: 22 PCPs Control group: 20 PCPs Completed: Intervention group: 21 PCPs/230 patients Control group: 15 PCPs/181 patients | PCPs | Received a copy of the | Received a copy of the | 1-year follow-up period | |
| Gerber JS, 2014, USA, Pfizer [ | Cluster RCT | 180 healthcare professionals Intervention group: 9 practices Control group: 9 practices | Pediatric primary care practices | (1) healthcare professional education, a 1-h review of current guidelines in prescribing, and (2) audit and feedback of antibiotic prescribing. | No intervention | 18 months follow up | |
| Martín-Madrazo C, 2012, Spain, NA [ | Cluster, parallel RCT | Randomized: Intervention group: 104 healthcare professionals (5 centers) Control group: 110 healthcare professionals (5 centers) Completed follow up: Intervention group: 84 healthcare professionals ((5 centers) Control group: 86 healthcare professionals (6 centers) | auxiliary nurses, dental hygienists, GPs, nurses, pediatricians, midwives and odontostomatologists. | Teaching sessions (Training of healthcare workers) were provided by two nurses within 1 month: 4 sessions of 50 min each for each primary care center on implementation of hydroalcoholic preparations, a video demonstrated the hand hygiene technique (6 steps), each consultation office placed hydroalcoholic solutions, and reminder poster on the walls were placed at key locations (e.g., consultation office, emergency room and waiting room). | No intervention | 6 months follow up | |
| Enriquez-Puga A, 2009, England, Eli Lilly [ | RCT | Antidepressant prescribing group: 14 general practices Antibiotic prescribing group: 14 general practices | General practices | Antidepressant prescribing: Educational outreach visits: first visit: lasted 20 to 40 min, group interactive discussion on the appropriate prescribing, barriers to change, and best solution to overcome them. A second visit: feedback on prescribing and clarify outstanding issues | Antibiotic prescribing: same with the antibiotic prescribing group. | Two years after the first educational outreach visit | |
| Cates CJ 2009, England, NA [ | Before–after study | One practice (Manor View) and a nearby control practice (Attenborough) | General practices | Evidence-based printed handout for parents and provide a deferred antibiotic prescription (with not to offer the antibiotics immediately advice). | Usual practices | Three years | |
GPs general practitioners, RCT randomized controlled trial, HCAs healthcare assistants, LQICs local quality improvement collaboratives, RTIs respiratory tract and ear infections, SCT social cognitive theory, PCP primary care physician, NA not applicable
care physician; NA, not applicable
Summary of the sustainability outcomes:
P: positive sustainability results
M: mixed sustainability results
N: no significant change
Methodological quality assessment of included studies
| Studies | Item 1 | Item 2 | Item 3 | Item 4 | Item 5 | Item 6 | Item 7 | Item 8 | Item 9 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spitaels D, 2019, Belgium [ | High | Unclear | Low | High | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | |
| Presseau J, 2018, England [ | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | High | |
| Pinto D, 2018, Portugal [ | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | High | High | Low | High | |
| Wang H-YJ, 2018, USA [ | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | |
| Trietsch J, 2017, Netherlands [ | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | High | Low | Unclear | |
| van der Velden AW, 2017, Netherlands [ | Unclear | High | Low | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | |
| Noto H, 2016, Japan [ | Unclear | Unclear | Low | High | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | High | |
| Gerber JS, 2014, USA [ | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | |
| Martín-Madrazo C, 2012, Spain [ | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | |
| Enriquez-Puga A, 2009, England [ | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Unclear | Low | Unclear | Low | Unclear | |
| Cates CJ 2009, England [ | High | High | High | High | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear |
Item 1 random sequence generation; Item 2 adequate concealment of allocation; Item 3 similar baseline outcome measures; Item 4 similar baseline characteristics; Item 5 blinding of outcome assessment; Item 6 adequately addressed incomplete outcome data; Item 7 adequate protection against contamination; Item 8 free from selective reporting; and Item 9 free of other risk of bias
Source:
Low = “Low risk”, High = “High risk”, Unclear = “Unclear risk”