| Literature DB >> 35841092 |
Jung-Mei Tsai1,2,3,4, Yu-Hung Wu5,6,7, Shu Yu8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Implementing evidence-based healthcare (EBHC) to improve the quality of patient care is a key issue for physicians and nurses. One of the most effective activities for achieving this is the annual topic-oriented clinical application national competition in Taiwan. Hundreds of clinical issues have been presented in this competition. By using the decomposed theory of planned behaviour (DTPB), this study explored physicians' and nurses' behaviour and adherence to the clinical application of EBHC after participating in the competitions.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical application; Decomposed theory of planned behaviour; Evidence-based healthcare; Seven action stages (7A)
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35841092 PMCID: PMC9284906 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-022-03610-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 3.263
Demographic characteristics of respondents to the survey on clinical application of EBHC (N = 312)
| Demographic characteristics | All ( | Achieve ‘adhered-to’ stage | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | No ( | Yes ( | |||
| n (%) | n (%) | ||||
| Gender | 0.92 | 0.337 | |||
| Male | 70 (22.4) | 50 (24.0) | 20 (19.2) | ||
| Female | 242 (77.6) | 158 (76.0) | 84 (80.9) | ||
| Age (years) | 8.36 | *0.015 | |||
| < 30 | 12 (3.8) | 10 (4.8) | 2 (1.9) | ||
| 30–40 | 84 (26.9) | 65 (31.2) | 19 (18.3) | ||
| > 40 | 216 (69.2) | 133 (63.9) | 83 (79.8) | ||
| Working experiences (years) | 15.07 | ***0.001 | |||
| < 10 | 40 (12.8) | 34 (16.3) | 6 (5.8) | ||
| 11 ~ 20 | 139 (44.6) | 100 (48.1) | 39 (37.5) | ||
| > 20 | 133 (42.6) | 74 (35.6) | 59 (56.7) | ||
| Academic degree | 0.37 | 0.545 | |||
| College or below | 97 (31.1) | 67 (32.2) | 30 (28.8) | ||
| Master or above | 215 (68.9) | 141 (67.8) | 74 (71.2) | ||
| Type of institution | 1.88 | 0.171 | |||
| Medical center | 231 (74.0) | 149 (71.6) | 82 (78.8) | ||
| Regional or lower | 81 (23.1) | 59 (28.4) | 22 (21.2) | ||
| Managerial duty | 11.06 | ***0.001 | |||
| Yes | 181 (58.0) | 107 (51.4) | 74 (71.2) | ||
| No | 131 (42.0) | 101 (48.6) | 30 (28.8) | ||
| Profession | 0.55 | 0.458 | |||
| Nurse | 235 (75.3) | 154 (74.0) | 81 (77.9) | ||
| Physician | 77 (24.7) | 54 (26.0) | 23 (22.1) | ||
| Specialty | 16.99 | **0.005 | |||
| Internal | 107 (33.9) | 72 (34.6) | 35 (33.7) | ||
| Surgery | 44 (14.6) | 29 (13.9) | 15 (14.4) | ||
| Pediatric | 35 (11.1) | 28 (13.5) | 7 (6.7) | ||
| Critical care | 44 (14.6) | 21 (10.1) | 23 (22.1) | ||
| OBS & GYN | 30 (9.1) | 16 (7.7) | 14 (13.5) | ||
| Others | 52 (16.7) | 42 (20.2) | 10 (9.6) | ||
| Associations | 9.87 | **0.007 | |||
| JCT | 162 (51.9) | 110 (52.9) | 52 (50.0) | ||
| TWNA | 48 (15.4) | 23 (11.1) | 25 (24.0) | ||
| TEBNA | 102 (32.7) | 75 (36.1) | 27 (26.0) | ||
| Competition times | 17.53 | ***0.001 | |||
| 1 time | 133 (42.6) | 104 (50.0) | 29 (27.9) | ||
| 2 times | 86 (27.6) | 56 (26.9) | 30 (28.8) | ||
| 3 times or more | 93 (29.8) | 48 (23.1) | 45 (43.3) | ||
EBHC Evidence-based healthcare
JCT Joint Commission of Taiwan, OBS Obstetrics, GYN Gynaecology, TWNA Taiwan Nurses Association, TEBNA Taiwan Evidence-Based Nurses Association
*p < .05; **p <.01; ***p <.001
Distribution of clinical application achievements in seven EBHC action stages among survey respondents (N = 312)
| Action stage | N (%) | Accumulated achievement (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Aware of | 43 (13.8) | 100.0% |
| Accepted | 15 (4.8) | 86.2% |
| Applicable | 39 (12.5) | 81.4% |
| Able | 18 (5.8) | 68.9% |
| Acted on | 50 (16.0) | 63.1% |
| Agreed | 43 (13.8) | 47.1% |
| Adhered to | 104 (33.3) | 33.3% |
EBHC Evidence-based healthcare, N Number
Fig. 1Study framework based on the decomposed theory of planned behaviour, along with path coefficients. *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001; R2 values are provided in parentheses
Total effect of DTPB constructs on behavioural intentions and behaviours
| Constructs | Behavioral intention | Behavior | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standardized effect | Standardized effect | |||
| Perceived usefulness | 0.256 | ***3.541 | 0.106 | **3.137 |
| Compatibility | 0.228 | **3.249 | 0.094 | **2.930 |
| Ease of use | −0.028 | −1.147 | −0.012 | −1.131 |
| Peer influences | 0.044 | *2.396 | 0.018 | *2.258 |
| Superior influences | 0.044 | *2.396 | 0.027 | *2.258 |
| Self-efficacy | 0.172 | ***5.068 | 0.253 | ***5.406 |
| Technical facilitating conditions | 0.030 | 1.767 | 0.045 | 1.780 |
| Resource facilitating conditions | 0.057 | **2.845 | 0.084 | **2.901 |
| Attitude | 0.572 | ***11.94 | 0.236 | ***5.891 |
| Subjective norm | 0.128 | **2.818 | 0.053 | **2.602 |
| Perceived behavioral control | 0.272 | ***6.139 | 0.402 | ***6.767 |
| Behavioral intention | 0.412 | ***6.606 |
DTPB Decomposed theory of planned behaviour
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001
Predictors, related to demographic and DTPB constructs, of adherence
| Predictors | Achieving the ‘adhered to’ stage | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B | S.E. | OR | 95% CI | ||
| Managerial duty (reference group: no) | |||||
| Yes | 0.71 | 0.31 | 0.024 | 2.03 | 1.10–3.77 |
| Behavioral intentiona | 0.67 | 0.17 | 0.000 | 1.96 | 1.40–2.73 |
| Perceived behavioral controla | 0.79 | 0.21 | 0.000 | 2.21 | 1.47–3.32 |
| Resource facilitation conditionsa | 0.06 | 0.03 | 0.021 | 1.06 | 1.01–1.11 |
| Constant | −10.26 | 1.28 | 0.000 | 0.00 | |
DTPB Decomposed theory of planned behaviour
asummated scale with the mean of the underlying items for the principal constructs in the study model