| Literature DB >> 35317816 |
Janice Gullick1, John Wu2, Derek Chew3, Chris Gale4, Andrew T Yan5, Shaun G Goodman6, Donna Waters7, Karice Hyun8,9, David Brieger10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Structured risk-stratification to guide clinician assessment and engagement with evidence-based therapies may reduce care variance and improve patient outcomes for Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS). The Australian Grace Risk score Intervention Study (AGRIS) explored the impact of the GRACE Risk Tool for stratification of ischaemic and bleeding risk in ACS. While hospitals in the active arm had a higher overall rate of invasive ACS management, there was neutral impact on important secondary prevention prescriptions/referrals, hospital performance measures, myocardial infarction and 12-month mortality leading to early trial cessation. Given the Grace Risk Tool is under investigation internationally, this process evaluation study provides important insights into the possible contribution of implementation fidelity on the AGRIS study findings.Entities:
Keywords: Acute coronary syndromes; Behaviour Change Wheel; COM-B; GRACE Risk Tool; Implementation; Implementation fidelity; Process evaluation; Quality of care; Risk stratification; Theoretical Domains Framework
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35317816 PMCID: PMC8941820 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-07750-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1The COM-B model (reproduced with permission [20])
Stages of implementation
| Implementation stage | Activities |
|---|---|
| Initial AGRIS Study information | For the substantive AGRIS study, clinicians representing the 43 sites enrolled in the Cooperative National Registry of Acute Coronary care, Guideline Adherence, and Clinical Events (CONCORDANCE registry) were briefed on the study protocol during an annual CONCORDANCE Investigator meeting |
| Inclusion criteria for AGRIS | Twenty-four CONCORDANCE sites were invited to participate based on: 1) an Emergency Department with 24/7 access, 2) without an existing, embedded ACS risk-stratification/decision-support tool, and 3) cardiology/medical units willing to implement the GRACE Risk Tool and associated treatment plan into the routine care processes. Further considerations were adequate perceived clinical leadership, perceived openness to change, existing measurement for system and process evaluation, and networks for support and referral between rural, regional and metropolitan hospitals [ |
| Implementation team development | Strategic teams and role descriptions were developed, internal and external to the CONCORDANCE team and participating sites [ |
| Implementation planning | In the pre-implementation phase, initial meetings between the study implementation steering committee and senior hospital staff (the implementation team) identified and engaged all affected multidisciplinary staff within the emergency and cardiology departments of all hospitals (n = 12) randomised to the active arm of AGRIS to discuss strategies to facilitate implementation |
| Implementation phase | In the implementation phase, the GRACE Risk Tool and associated treatment plan was introduced into hospital workflow at these 12 hospitals. All 12 hospitals reached the threshold for inclusion as an active site (defined as 90% completion of the GRACE Risk Tool in consecutive patients also enrolled in the CONCORDANCE registry in any one month: the CONCORDANCE registry seeks to recruit the first ten consecutive ACS patients per month presenting to participating facilities) [ |
| Post-implementation | Further ethical approval was obtained for the process evaluation (CH62/6/2013–154). Key stakeholders from five of the 12 hospitals to engage in an in-depth interview to provide feedback on implementation processes at their site, and to consider barriers and enablers to effective and sustained implementation of the intervention into wider cardiology practice |
Characteristics of the hospitals participating in AGRIS process evaluation
| Participating Site | Site characteristics |
|---|---|
| Hospital 1 | Publicly funded, tertiary urban teaching hospital in a large Australian city. 800–1000 beds. 24-h PCI-capable cardiac catheter laboratory, Coronary Care Unit, ED-based Cardiac Investigation Unit |
| Hospital 2 | Publicly funded, regional teaching hospital, + 150 beds, Critical care unit with dedicated coronary care beds. Cardiac catheter laboratory offering diagnostic procedures only. Distance from closest state capital city > 150 km |
| Hospital 3 | Publicly funded, regional teaching hospital, 500 + beds with coronary care unit. 24-h PCI-capable cardiac catheter laboratory, Distance from closest state capital city > 75 km |
| Hospital 4 | Tertiary, publicly funded tertiary teaching hospital in a large Australian city. 800–1000 beds. 24-h PCI-capable cardiac catheter laboratory, Coronary Care Unit, ED-based Cardiac Investigation Unit |
| Hospital 5 | Publicly funded, regional teaching hospital. Critical care unit with dedicated coronary care beds. 24-h PCI-capable cardiac catheter laboratory, Distance from closest state capital city > 75 km |
Role descriptors of participants
| Position description | Definitions as applied to participants in this study |
|---|---|
| Head of Department(HoD) | A cardiologist who is the medical director of a cardiology department |
| Cardiologist(Card) | An interventional cardiologist employed as either a hospital staff specialist or visiting medical officer |
| Advanced Trainee(AT) | A medical officer employed in a role that is the culmination of the minimum 6-year training program preparing them to become a physician and Fellow of the Royal Australian College of Physicians within a specialist area of medical practice; in this case, Cardiology |
| Basic Physician Trainee (BPT) | A medical officer employed in a role that prepares them for Part 1 of the Royal Australian College of Physicians examination |
| Intern(Int) | A medical officer undertaking a period of mandatory, supervised general clinical practice, allowing graduates to apply and consolidate their clinical skills |
| Advanced Practice Nurse(APN) | Advanced Practice Nurses are employed in a range of roles – in this study, APNs were working as Clinical Nurse Consultants (incorporating direct clinical consultancy, education, research, clinical leadership and support of systems), or Cardiac liaison roles between Emergency and Cardiology Departments to facilitate rapid assessment, and either departmental transfer or discharge |
| Clinical Trial Coordinator(CT Coord) | Study coordinators who worked within their institutions to support the protocol of the AGRIS trial. In this study, all coordinators had previously worked in clinical roles in acute clinical settings |
Mapping the Behaviour Change Wheel’s COM-B system to the Theoretical Domains Framework (reproduced with permission [24])
| Physical | Skills | |
| Psychological | Knowledge Skills Memory, attention and decision processes Behavioural regulation | |
| Social | Social Influences | |
| Physical | Environmental context & resources | |
| Reflective | Social/professional role & identity Beliefs about capabilities Optimism Beliefs about consequences Intentions Goals | |
| Automatic | Social/Professional role & identity Optimism Reinforcement Emotion |
Fig. 2The Behaviour Change Wheel (Reproduced with Permission [32])