期刊论文详细信息
BMJ Open Quality
The role of quality improvement collaboratives in general practice: a qualitative systematic review
article
Andrew Walter Knight1  Chun Wah Michael Tam1  Sarah Dennis3  John Fraser5  Dimity Pond7 
[1] The Primary and Integrated Care Unit , South Western Sydney Local Health District;School of Population Health , University of New South Wales;Faculty of Medicine and Health , The University of Sydney;Ingham Institute;School of Rural Medicine , University of New England;School of Medicine and Public Health , The University of Newcastle;The University of Newcastle
关键词: Collaborative;    breakthrough groups;    General practice;    Healthcare quality improvement;    Primary care;    Quality improvement methodologies;   
DOI  :  10.1136/bmjoq-2021-001800
学科分类:药学
来源: BMJ Publishing Group
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background This systematic review used qualitative methodologies to examine the role of quality improvement collaboratives (QICs) in general practice. The aim was to inform implementers and participants about the utility of using or participating in QICs in general practice.Methods Included studies were published in English, used a QIC intervention, reported primary research, used qualitative or mixed methods, and were conducted in general practice.A Medline search between January 1995 and February 2020 was developed and extended to include Embase, CINAHL and PsycInfo databases. Articles were sought through chaining of references and grey literature searches.Qualitative outcome data were extracted using a framework analysis. Data were analysed using thematic synthesis. Articles were assessed for quality using a threshold approach based on the criteria described by Dixon-Woods.Results 15 qualitative and 18 mixed-methods studies of QICs in general practice were included. Data were grouped into four analytical themes which describe the role of a collaborative in general practice: improving the target topic, developing practices and providers, developing the health system and building quality improvement capacity.Discussion General practice collaboratives are reported to be useful for improving target topics. They can also develop knowledge and motivation in providers, build systems and team work in local practice organisations, and improve support at a system level. Collaboratives can build quality improvement capacity in the primary care system. These roles suggest that QICs are well matched to the improvement needs of general practice.General practice participants in collaboratives reported positive effects from effective peer interaction, high-quality local support, real engagement with data and well-designed training in quality improvement.Strengths of this study were an inclusive search and explicit qualitative methodology. It is possible some studies were missed. Qualitative studies of collaboratives may be affected by selection bias and confirmation bias.PROSPERO registration number CRD4202017512.

【 授权许可】

CC BY-NC|CC BY|CC BY-NC-ND   

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
RO202306290001645ZK.pdf 419KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:0次 浏览次数:1次