Literature DB >> 8989346

Clinical practice guidelines in pediatric and newborn medicine: implications for their use in practice.

T A Merritt1, D Palmer, D A Bergman, P H Shiono.   

Abstract

Clinical practice guidelines are becoming pervasive in pediatrics and newborn medicine. They have spanned a wide range of primary care practice parameters from treating otitis media with effusion, to performing complex surgery for congenital heart disease, and management of respiratory distress syndrome and coordinating discharge from the neonatal intensive care unit. Administrators believe that using clinical practice parameters reduces health care costs, improves quality of care, and limits malpractice liability. Practice parameters and guidelines have grown in use because powerful interests-third-party payers, insurers, and health maintenance organizations, as well as hospital administrators bent on reducing variable costs of care and contracting for capitated care-champion their development, implementation, and monitoring. Economic credentialing of physicians with excessive variances without risk-adjusting for other than average patients is problematic and remains unchecked partly because of the fundamental characteristics of the evolving health care industry in which costs are more easily measured than quality. For highly autonomus physicians this standardization of medical decision making may represent a difficult transition into corporate practice by realigning traditional values of the doctor-patient relationship. However, because guidelines are almost certainly here to stay, pediatricians and neonatologists need to think critically about how their content and method of implementation, monitoring, and modification may influence medical teaching and decision making in the future. If guidelines are introduced primarily as a cost savings or containment tool that ignores the impact on the quality of care and restricts necessary care for infants and children, especially those with chronic illness or who are developmentally at risk, then neonatologists and pediatricians must be quick and determined to challenge the potentially damaging use of practice parameters or guidelines. Furthermore, there are many medicolegal implications of guideline implementation that may not favor physicians and leave to hospitals, insurers, and ultimately the courts decisions regarding evidence-based practice. In this review article, we pay special attention to the guidelines developed in newborn medicine. We discuss why and how guidelines are developed and critically evaluate the available evidence describing potential benefits and drawbacks of guidelines in general. There are legal implications to the implementation of guidelines, and guidelines may increase provider susceptibility to malpractice allegations. Neonatologists and pediatricians should critically analyze the following questions when guidelines are being developed: Are clinical practice parameters the most effective means to reduce the costs of health care, or improve the quality of health care services while reducing the need for and protecting physicians from malpractice suits? Or do clinical practice guidelines more closely resemble an audit system developed by health care organizations, insurers, and others including government-sponsored health care to appease powerful interests-with limited evidence for promise and perhaps potential negative cost, quality, and malpractice liability implications? In pediatric and newborn medicine there is limited evidence that guidelines have achieved the desired goals and further analysis of their process of care and the costs of implementation is warranted.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 8989346     DOI: 10.1542/peds.99.1.100

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


  8 in total

1.  Embedding the guideline elements model in web ontology language.

Authors:  Nam Tran; George Michel; Michael Krauthammer; Richard N Shiffman
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2009-11-14

Review 2.  Assessing the performance of community systems for children.

Authors:  H M DuPlessis; M Inkelas; N Halfon
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  1998-10       Impact factor: 3.402

3.  Building better guidelines with BRIDGE-Wiz: development and evaluation of a software assistant to promote clarity, transparency, and implementability.

Authors:  Richard N Shiffman; George Michel; Richard M Rosenfeld; Caryn Davidson
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2011-08-16       Impact factor: 4.497

Review 4.  Impact of standardised feeding regimens on incidence of neonatal necrotising enterocolitis: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies.

Authors:  S K Patole; N de Klerk
Journal:  Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 5.747

5.  Does a paediatric after-hours clinic use evidence-based guidelines in the management of acute otitis media?

Authors:  Jonathon L Maguire; Jane Healey; Hartley Garfield; Patricia C Parkin
Journal:  Paediatr Child Health       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 2.253

6.  Clinical practice guidelines and industry.

Authors: 
Journal:  Mens Sana Monogr       Date:  2007-01

Review 7.  Reviewing clinical guideline development tools: features and characteristics.

Authors:  Soudabeh Khodambashi; Øystein Nytrø
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2017-09-04       Impact factor: 2.796

Review 8.  Practice parameters in pediatric allergy.

Authors:  Richard A Nicklas
Journal:  Curr Allergy Asthma Rep       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 4.919

  8 in total

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