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Using a knowledge translation framework to implement asthma clinical practice guidelines in primary care
QUALITY PROBLEM: International guidelines establish evidence-based standards for asthma care; however, recommendations are often not implemented and many patients do not meet control targets. INITIAL ASSESSMENT: Regional pilot data demonstrated a knowledge-to-practice gap. CHOICE OF SOLUTIONS: We en...
Autores principales: | , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2012
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3441097/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22893665 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzs043 |
Sumario: | QUALITY PROBLEM: International guidelines establish evidence-based standards for asthma care; however, recommendations are often not implemented and many patients do not meet control targets. INITIAL ASSESSMENT: Regional pilot data demonstrated a knowledge-to-practice gap. CHOICE OF SOLUTIONS: We engineered health system change in a multi-step approach described by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research knowledge translation framework. IMPLEMENTATION: Knowledge translation occurred at multiple levels: patient, practice and local health system. A regional administrative infrastructure and inter-disciplinary care teams were developed. The key project deliverable was a guideline-based interdisciplinary asthma management program. Six community organizations, 33 primary care physicians and 519 patients participated. The program operating cost was $290/patient. EVALUATION: Six guideline-based care elements were implemented, including spirometry measurement, asthma controller therapy, a written self-management action plan and general asthma education, including the inhaler device technique, role of medications and environmental control strategies in 93, 95, 86, 100, 97 and 87% of patients, respectively. Of the total patients 66% were adults, 61% were female, the mean age was 35.7 (SD = ±24.2) years. At baseline 42% had two or more symptoms beyond acceptable limits vs. 17% (P< 0.001) post-intervention; 71% reported urgent/emergent healthcare visits at baseline (2.94 visits/year) vs. 45% (1.45 visits/year) (P< 0.001); 39% reported absenteeism (5.0 days/year) vs. 19% (3.0 days/year) (P< 0.001). The mean follow-up interval was 22 (SD = ±7) months. LESSONS LEARNED: A knowledge-translation framework can guide multi-level organizational change, facilitate asthma guideline implementation, and improve health outcomes in community primary care practices. Program costs are similar to those of diabetes programs. Program savings offset costs in a ratio of 2.1:1 |
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