| Literature DB >> 36064428 |
Sophie Relph1, Kirstie Coxon2, Matias C Vieira3,4, Andrew Copas5, Andrew Healey6, Alessandro Alagna7, Annette Briley3,8, Mark Johnson9, Deborah A Lawlor10,11,12, Christoph Lees9, Neil Marlow13, Lesley McCowan14, Jessica McMicking15, Louise Page16, Donald Peebles13, Andrew Shennan3, Baskaran Thilaganathan17,18, Asma Khalil17,18, Dharmintra Pasupathy3,19, Jane Sandall3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reducing the rate of stillbirth is an international priority. At least half of babies stillborn in high-income countries are small for gestational-age (SGA). The Growth Assessment Protocol (GAP), a complex antenatal intervention that aims to increase the rate of antenatal detection of SGA, was evaluated in the DESiGN type 2 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster randomised trial (n = 13 clusters). In this paper, we present the trial process evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptability; Antenatal screening; Cluster-controlled trial; Context; Feasibility; Implementation; Process evaluation; Small-for-gestational age foetus
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36064428 PMCID: PMC9446790 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-022-01228-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.960
Sources of data on GAP implementation outcomes at implementing sites
| Implementation outcome | Outcome source | Application to implementation of GAP | Data source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Context± | Steckler and Linnan (2002) [ | Qualitative data collection instruments incorporated CFIR implementation domains and associated constructs [ | Semi-structured interviews with lead clinicians and frontline staff |
| Fidelity | Steckler and Linnan (2002) [ | Adherence to GAP provider training requirement that 75% of staff from each professional group (midwives, sonographers, obstetricians) were trained using both (i) face-to-face and (ii) e-learning methods | Staff training records from the GAP provider |
Degree of concordance to Perinatal Institute guideline assessed as follows: | Local clinical guidelines on screening for foetal growth anomalies | ||
| Proportion of women correctly risk stratified (according to GAP) | Review of the maternity records of 600 women who gave birth during the trial period (40 from each of December 2018, January and February 2019 in each cluster) | ||
| Reach | Steckler and Linnan (2002) [ | Proportion of women with a GAP-GROW chart in the notes | Maternity records review (see above) |
| Dose delivered and received | Steckler and Linnan (2002) [ | Proportion of low-risk women* who had at least the minimum expected fundal height measurements performed and plotted on the chart | Maternity records review (see above) |
| Proportion of low-risk women* referred for growth scan when indicated | |||
| Proportion of high-risk women* who had at least the minimum expected growth scans performed and plotted on the chart | |||
| Implementation strength | Schellenberg et al. (2021) [ | Combined assessment of fidelity, dose and reach | |
| Acceptability | Proctor et al. (2011) [ | Acceptability of GAP implementation from the perspectives of clinicians | Semi-structured interviews with lead clinicians and frontline staff |
| Feasibility | Proctor et al. (2011) [ | The degree to which GAP implementation is feasible, from the perspectives of interview participants | |
CICI context and implementation of complex interventions framework, GAP Growth Assessment Protocol, GROW gestation-related optimal weight. *Risk status as determined by clinician. Risk assessment is expected to consider the risk stratification protocol specified in the GAP guidelines but may be modified for local practice. ±Assessed at both implementing and standard care sites
Fig. 1The context and implementation of complex interventions (CICI) framework.
The framework comprises the three dimensions context, implementation and setting. The context comprises the seven domains: geographical, epidemiological, socio-cultural, socio-economic, ethical, legal, political context. Implementation consists of implementation theory, implementation process, implementation strategies, implementation agents and implementation outcomes. In the setting, the intervention and its implementation interact with the context. Reproduced under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), from Pfadenhauer et al (2017, Implementation Science) [29]
Implementation process, intervention components and implementation strategies of the Growth Assessment Protocol, as specified by the intervention provider
| Implementation process domains (CICI) | Intervention components | Implementation strategies |
|---|---|---|
| Decision to adopt | • Recruit sites | |
| Planning and preparation | • Update the maternity unit’s foetal growth assessment guideline in line with guidance issued by the Perinatal Institute • Audit of baseline rates of detection of the SGA foetus • Trust protocol aligned with GAP | • Identify maternity unit’s GAP team and administration leads (midwife, sonographer, obstetric leads, information technology liaison for hardware and software) • Perinatal Institute convenes monthly meetings between nominated GAP leads from local sites to discuss implementation progress and challenges • Complete baseline audit of rate of SGA, referral for suspected SGA and confirmed SGA detection (3 months’ births) |
| Initial implementation | • Annual whole-staff training on the intervention by both face-to-face and e-learning methods | • Selected staff to attend GAP ‘train the trainers’ workshop, led by the Perinatal Institute • Trainers to cascade both face-to-face and e-learning GAP training to 75% of staff from each professional group: midwives, sonographers and obstetricians • Perinatal Institute continues to meet monthly with GAP leads |
Full implementation (‘going live’) | • Risk stratification of pregnant women in early pregnancy into two strata according to whether women are at low or high risk of SGA, using the NHS-England risk-stratification decision tool [ • Serial fundal height measurements for low-risk women, plotted onto a ‘gestation-related optimal weight’ (GROW) centile chart, which is customised by maternal height, weight, ethnicity and parity [ • Serial foetal growth ultrasound for high-risk women, with the estimated foetal weight plotted onto the GROW chart • Protocols for the interpretation and onward management of plots on the GROW chart which deviate from the expected growth trajectory | • Use GAP SGA risk assessments and SGA management referrals from ‘go live’ date • Facilitate printing of GROW centile chart and incorporation into individual maternity notes • For low-risk women, begin plotting fundal height measurements onto GROW chart from 26 to 28 weeks every 2–3 weeks • For high-risk women, foetal growth ultrasound every 3 weeks from 26 to 28 weeks until the end of pregnancy • Raise awareness amongst staff of GAP with posters, emails, reminders and in-person visits by GAP leads and trainers to antenatal care settings • Liaise with PI about GAP queries |
| Evaluation, reflection and sustainment | • Guidance on the conduct of missed case audit and investigation | • Undertake audit of missed FGR cases (10 cases 6 monthly or 1% of birth rate) |
Overall assessment of implementation strength
| Site 7 | Site 8 | Site 9 | Site 10 | Site 11 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Degree of concordancea with Perinatal Institute guideline | Low | High | Medium | Medium | High | ||
| Proportion of staff trained within each professional group | Face-to-face target | > 75% | > 75% | > 75% | > 75% | > 75% | |
| E-learning target | < 75% | < 75% | > 75% | < 75% | < 75% | ||
| Proportion of women risk stratified according to GAP | 87.5% (105/120) | 78.6% (92/117) | 84.2% (105/121) | 83.2% (99/119) | 84.4% (98/116) | ||
| Proportion of women with a GAP-GROW chart in the notes | 62.2% (74/119) | 98.3% (115/117) | 93.3% (131/121) | 96.6% (115/119) | 94.2% (113/120) | ||
| Proportion of low-risk women who had at least the minimum expected number of fundal height measurements performed and plotted on GROW | 8.2% (4/49) | 53.2% (42/79) | 34.4% (31/90) | 31.4% (22/70) | 18.1% (15/83) | ||
| Proportion of low-risk women referred for growth scan when definite plot deviation | 40.0% (4/10) | 79.2% (19/24) | 80.9% (17/21) | 66.7% (10/15) | 61.2% (19/31) | ||
| Proportion of high-risk women who had at least the minimum expected number of growth scans performed and plotted on GROW | 0.0% (0/33) | 16.7% (8/48) | 2.9% (1/35) | 12.8% (6/47) | 5.3% (2/38) | ||
aDegrees of concordance defined in Table 1
Outcome of the assessment of risk stratification, comparing clinician assessment to GAP and local recommendations
| Site reference | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk status (by GAP) | Site 7 | Site 8 | Site 9 | Site 10 | Site 11 | All | |
| Agreement between GAP and clinician | High risk ( | 32 | 24 | 21 | 32 | 24 | 133 |
| Low risk ( | 73 | 68 | 87 | 68 | 76 | 372 | |
| Both | 105/120 (87.5%) | 92/117 (78.6%) | 108/121 (89.3%) | 100/117 (85.5%) | 100/120 (83.3%) | 505/595 (84.9%) | |
| Clinician did not classify risk as recommended in GAP | High risk ( | 9 | 13 | 9 | 3 | 14 | 48 |
| Low risk ( | 6 | 12 | 4 | 14 | 6 | 42 | |
| Both | 15/120(12.5%) | 25/117 (21.4%) | 13/121 (10.7%) | 17/117 (14.5%) | 20/120 (16.7%) | 90/595 (15.1%) | |
| If GAP classification is wrong, classified correctly as per local policy? | 2/15 (13.3%) | 0/25 (0.0%) | 7/13 (53.8%) | 7/17 (41.2%) | 3/20 (15.0%) | 19/90 (21.1%) | |
Proportion of low-risk women with at least the minimum expected number of fundal height plots on GROW chart
| Women with at least the minimum expected number of fundal height chart plots | ||
|---|---|---|
| Site identifier | Number | Percentage |
| Site 7 ( | 4 | 8.2% |
| Nulliparous ( | 3 | 12.0% |
| Multiparous ( | 1 | 4.2% |
| Site 8 ( | 42 | 53.2% |
| Nulliparous ( | 28 | 65.1% |
| Multiparous ( | 14 | 38.9% |
| Site 9 ( | 31 | 34.4% |
| Nulliparous ( | 22 | 40.0% |
| Multiparous ( | 9 | 25.7% |
| Site 10 ( | 22 | 31.4% |
| Nulliparous ( | 15 | 34.9% |
| Multiparous ( | 7 | 25.9% |
| Site 11 ( | 15 | 18.1% |
| Nulliparous ( | 9 | 25.0% |
| Multiparous ( | 6 | 12.8% |
| Total ( | ||
| Nulliparous ( | ||
| Multiparous ( | ||
aChi-squared test comparing proportion of nulliparous to multiparous women with the expected number of fundal height plots, p < 0.001