Cargando…

Journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care

Background: A journal club is a forum to debate and review clinical practice using a number of models to gauge the strength of evidence associated with the clinical practice. A large body of evidence supports the importance of journal clubs as a method to improve patient outcome by enhancing the imp...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Almomani, Emad, Alraoush, Tawfiq, Sadah, Omar, Al Nsour, Ahmed, Kamble, Megha, Samuel, Jisha, Atallah, Karim, Zarie, Kobra, Mustafa, Emad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: HBKU Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6851961/
http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.85
_version_ 1783469727732989952
author Almomani, Emad
Alraoush, Tawfiq
Sadah, Omar
Al Nsour, Ahmed
Kamble, Megha
Samuel, Jisha
Atallah, Karim
Zarie, Kobra
Mustafa, Emad
author_facet Almomani, Emad
Alraoush, Tawfiq
Sadah, Omar
Al Nsour, Ahmed
Kamble, Megha
Samuel, Jisha
Atallah, Karim
Zarie, Kobra
Mustafa, Emad
author_sort Almomani, Emad
collection PubMed
description Background: A journal club is a forum to debate and review clinical practice using a number of models to gauge the strength of evidence associated with the clinical practice. A large body of evidence supports the importance of journal clubs as a method to improve patient outcome by enhancing the implementation of evidence-based practice and professional development in the clinical setting(1–3). Journal club activities have been recommended by the Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) Critical Care Nursing Network (CCNN), Qatar, and started in the critical care areas of Hamad General Hospital for different critical care specialties such as trauma, surgical, and medical ICUs since 2014. Methods: The journal club is a 1-hour monthly critical care educational activity for HMC critical care nurses. A flyer promoting the article to be discussed is shared with the critical care nurses one week prior to the scheduled date and each session is attended by 15–20 nurses. Participants gain continuing professional development (CPD) credits for each session they attend. The articles discussed cover patient safety and critical care clinical practices. A structured review of the selected articles is facilitated by an expert educator with a research background. The strength of the evidence to change current clinical practice will be evaluated in a group discussion format (Table 1). At the end of each journal club activity, the facilitator summarizes the learning points, recommendations, and the action plan if the group believes changes to current clinical practice are recommended(3). Results: Around 50 journal clubs have been conducted in the critical care units of HMC with a total attendance of 1100 nurses. The journal club activity encouraged critical care nurses to establish the first nursing clinical research team in critical care areas of HMC (Table 2). Additionally, it had a positive impact on improving the professional development and competency level of the critical care nurses which were assessed and evaluated by HMC critical care competency assessors through applying the specialty critical care competency checklist. Finally, implementation of the journal club activity and reviewing best available evidence and research literature led to improvements in clinical practice (Table 3). Conclusion: Implementation of the journal club activity helped in developing critical care nurses’ awareness on current research studies and best available evidence, in addition to keeping them up-to-date with new findings, practices, and critical care trends. The journal club with its structured review questions has proven to be an effective way of evaluating the strengths of the evidence presented in the reviewed articles and sometimes led to changing our critical care clinical practice. It also contributes to improving nurses’ ability to critically appraise research articles. Furthermore, it promotes the implementation of new knowledge gained in clinical practice which is expected to improve patient safety and outcomes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6851961
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher HBKU Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68519612019-11-22 Journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care Almomani, Emad Alraoush, Tawfiq Sadah, Omar Al Nsour, Ahmed Kamble, Megha Samuel, Jisha Atallah, Karim Zarie, Kobra Mustafa, Emad Qatar Med J Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract Background: A journal club is a forum to debate and review clinical practice using a number of models to gauge the strength of evidence associated with the clinical practice. A large body of evidence supports the importance of journal clubs as a method to improve patient outcome by enhancing the implementation of evidence-based practice and professional development in the clinical setting(1–3). Journal club activities have been recommended by the Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) Critical Care Nursing Network (CCNN), Qatar, and started in the critical care areas of Hamad General Hospital for different critical care specialties such as trauma, surgical, and medical ICUs since 2014. Methods: The journal club is a 1-hour monthly critical care educational activity for HMC critical care nurses. A flyer promoting the article to be discussed is shared with the critical care nurses one week prior to the scheduled date and each session is attended by 15–20 nurses. Participants gain continuing professional development (CPD) credits for each session they attend. The articles discussed cover patient safety and critical care clinical practices. A structured review of the selected articles is facilitated by an expert educator with a research background. The strength of the evidence to change current clinical practice will be evaluated in a group discussion format (Table 1). At the end of each journal club activity, the facilitator summarizes the learning points, recommendations, and the action plan if the group believes changes to current clinical practice are recommended(3). Results: Around 50 journal clubs have been conducted in the critical care units of HMC with a total attendance of 1100 nurses. The journal club activity encouraged critical care nurses to establish the first nursing clinical research team in critical care areas of HMC (Table 2). Additionally, it had a positive impact on improving the professional development and competency level of the critical care nurses which were assessed and evaluated by HMC critical care competency assessors through applying the specialty critical care competency checklist. Finally, implementation of the journal club activity and reviewing best available evidence and research literature led to improvements in clinical practice (Table 3). Conclusion: Implementation of the journal club activity helped in developing critical care nurses’ awareness on current research studies and best available evidence, in addition to keeping them up-to-date with new findings, practices, and critical care trends. The journal club with its structured review questions has proven to be an effective way of evaluating the strengths of the evidence presented in the reviewed articles and sometimes led to changing our critical care clinical practice. It also contributes to improving nurses’ ability to critically appraise research articles. Furthermore, it promotes the implementation of new knowledge gained in clinical practice which is expected to improve patient safety and outcomes. HBKU Press 2019-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6851961/ http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.85 Text en © 2019 Almomani, Alraoush, Sadah, Al Nsour, Kamble, Samuel, Atallah, Zarie, Mustafa, licensee HBKU Press. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license CC BY 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract
Almomani, Emad
Alraoush, Tawfiq
Sadah, Omar
Al Nsour, Ahmed
Kamble, Megha
Samuel, Jisha
Atallah, Karim
Zarie, Kobra
Mustafa, Emad
Journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care
title Journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care
title_full Journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care
title_fullStr Journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care
title_full_unstemmed Journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care
title_short Journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care
title_sort journal club as a tool to facilitate evidence based practice in critical care
topic Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6851961/
http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.85
work_keys_str_mv AT almomaniemad journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare
AT alraoushtawfiq journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare
AT sadahomar journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare
AT alnsourahmed journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare
AT kamblemegha journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare
AT samueljisha journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare
AT atallahkarim journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare
AT zariekobra journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare
AT mustafaemad journalclubasatooltofacilitateevidencebasedpracticeincriticalcare