Scoping review of the effectiveness of 10 high-impact initiatives (HIIs) for recovering urgent and emergency care services

IF 1.3 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMJ Open Quality Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1136/bmjoq-2024-002906
Christopher Carroll, Burak Kundakci, Amber Muhinyi, Anastasios Bastounis, Katherine Jones, Anthea Sutton, Steve Goodacre, Carl Marincowitz, Andrew Booth
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Abstract

Introduction Prolonged ambulance response times and unacceptable emergency department (ED) wait times are significant challenges in urgent and emergency care systems associated with patient harm. This scoping review aimed to evaluate the evidence base for 10 urgent and emergency care high-impact initiatives identified by the National Health Service (NHS) England. Methods A two-stage approach was employed. First, a comprehensive search for reviews (2018–2023) was conducted across PubMed, Epistemonikos and Google Scholar. Additionally, full-text searches using Google Scholar were performed for studies related to the key outcomes. In the absence of sufficient review-level evidence, relevant available primary research studies were identified through targeted MEDLINE and HMIC searches. Relevant reviews and studies were mapped to the 10 high-impact initiatives. Reviewers worked in pairs or singly to identify studies, extract, tabulate and summarise data. Results The search yielded 20 771 citations, with 48 reviews meeting the inclusion criteria across 10 sections. In the absence of substantive review-level evidence for the key outcomes, primary research studies were also sought for seven of the 10 initiatives. Evidence for interventions improving ambulance response times was generally scarce. ED wait times were commonly studied using ED length of stay, with some evidence that same day emergency care, acute frailty units, care transfer hubs and some in-patient flow interventions might reduce direct and indirect measures of wait times. Proximal evidence existed for initiatives such as urgent community response, virtual hospitals/hospital at home and inpatient flow interventions (involving flow coordinators), which did not typically evaluate the NHS England outcomes of interest. Conclusions Effective interventions were often only identifiable as components within the NHS England 10 high-impact initiative groupings. The evidence base remains limited, with substantial heterogeneity in urgent and emergency care initiatives, metrics and reporting across different studies and settings. Future research should focus on well-defined interventions while remaining sensitive to local context. All data relevant to the study are included in the article or uploaded as online supplemental information.
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对 10 项旨在恢复紧急和急诊服务的高效倡议(HII)的有效性进行范围界定审查
导言:救护车响应时间过长和急诊科(ED)等待时间过长是急诊和急救系统面临的重大挑战,会对患者造成伤害。本次范围界定审查旨在评估英国国家医疗服务系统(NHS)确定的 10 项紧急和急诊护理高效措施的证据基础。方法 采用两阶段方法。首先,在 PubMed、Epistemonikos 和 Google Scholar 上对综述(2018-2023 年)进行了全面检索。此外,还使用谷歌学术对与关键结果相关的研究进行了全文检索。在缺乏足够的综述级证据的情况下,通过有针对性的 MEDLINE 和 HMIC 搜索,确定了现有的相关初级研究。将相关综述和研究与 10 项高影响力倡议进行映射。评审员结对或单独工作,以确定研究、提取、制表和汇总数据。结果 搜索共获得 20 771 条引文,其中 48 篇综述符合 10 个部分的纳入标准。由于缺乏针对关键结果的实质性综述级证据,因此还对 10 项措施中的 7 项进行了初步研究。有关改善救护车响应时间的干预措施的证据普遍较少。急诊室等待时间通常使用急诊室停留时间进行研究,有证据表明,当日急诊、急性虚弱病房、护理转运中心和一些住院流程干预措施可能会减少直接和间接的等待时间。紧急社区响应、虚拟医院/居家医院和住院流程干预措施(涉及流程协调员)等措施存在近似证据,但这些措施通常不会对英格兰国家医疗服务体系所关注的结果进行评估。结论 有效的干预措施通常只能作为英格兰国家医疗服务体系 10 项高影响力措施分组中的组成部分。证据基础仍然有限,不同的研究和环境在紧急和急诊护理措施、衡量标准和报告方面存在很大的异质性。未来的研究应重点关注定义明确的干预措施,同时对当地情况保持敏感。与研究相关的所有数据均包含在文章中或作为在线补充信息上传。
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来源期刊
BMJ Open Quality
BMJ Open Quality Nursing-Leadership and Management
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
226
审稿时长
20 weeks
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