Abstract
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. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press in association with the International Society for Quality in Health Care.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Licskai, C., Sands, T., Ong, M., Paolatto, L., & Nicoletti, I. (2012). Using a knowledge translation framework to implement asthma clinical practice guidelines in primary care. International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 24(5), 538–546. https://doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzs043
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.