Best Practice Implementation and Clinical Inertia

E. Barkoudah
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Abstract

C linical inertia is defined as the failure of clinicians to initiate or escalate guideline-directed medical therapy to achieve treatment goals for welldefined clinical conditions.1,2 Evidence-based guidelines recommend optimal disease management with readily available medical therapies throughout the phases of clinical care. Unfortunately, the care provided to individual patients undergoes multiple modifications throughout the disease course, resulting in divergent pathways, significant deviations from treatment guidelines, and failure of “safeguard” checkpoints to reinstate, initiate, optimize, or stop treatments. Clinical inertia generally describes rigidity or resistance to change around implementing evidence-based guidelines. Furthermore, this term describes treatment behavior on the part of an individual clinician, not organizational inertia, which generally encompasses both internal (immediate clinical practice settings) and external factors (national and international guidelines and recommendations), eventually leading to resistance to optimizing disease treatment and therapeutic regimens. Individual clinicians’ clinical inertia in the form of resistance to guideline implementation and evidence-based principles can be one factor that drives organizational inertia. In turn, such individual behavior can be dictated by personal beliefs, knowledge, interpretation, skills, management principles, and biases. The terms therapeutic inertia or clinical inertia should not be confused with nonadherence from the patient’s standpoint when the clinician follows the best practice guidelines.3 Clinical inertia has been described in several clinical domains, including diabetes,4,5 hypertension,6,7 heart failure,8 depression,9 pulmonary medicine,10 and complex disease management.11 Clinicians can set suboptimal treatment goals due to specific beliefs and attitudes around optimal therapeutic goals. For example, when treating a patient with a chronic disease that is presently stable, a clinician could elect to initiate suboptimal treatment, as escalation of treatment might not be the priority in stable disease; they also may have concerns about overtreatment. Other factors that can contribute to clinical inertia (ie, undertreatment in the presence of indications for treatment) include those related to the patient, the clinical setting, and the organization, along with the importance of individualizing therapies in specific patients. Organizational inertia is the initial global resistance by the system to implementation, which can slow the dissemination and adaptation of best practices but eventually declines over time. Individual clinical inertia, on the other hand, will likely persist after the system-level rollout of guideline-based approaches. The trajectory of dissemination, implementation, and adaptation of innovations and best practices is illustrated in the Figure. When the guidelines and medical societies endorse the adaptation of innovations or practice change after the benefits of such innovations/change have been established by the regulatory bodies, uptake can be hindered by both organizational and clinical inertia. Overcoming inertia to system-level changes requires addressing individual clinicians, along with practice and organizational factors, in order to ensure systematic adaptations. From the clinicians’ view, training and cognitive interventions to improve the adaptation and coping skills can improve understanding of treatment options through
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最佳实践实施和临床惯性
临床惰性是指临床医生未能启动或升级指南指导的医疗治疗,以实现明确临床条件下的治疗目标。1,2基于证据的指南建议在整个临床护理阶段使用现成的医疗疗法进行最佳疾病管理。不幸的是,在整个病程中,为个别患者提供的护理经历了多次修改,导致路径不同,严重偏离治疗指南,以及未能通过“保障”检查点恢复、启动、优化或停止治疗。临床惰性通常描述围绕实施循证指南的僵化或对变革的抵制。此外,这个术语描述的是临床医生个人的治疗行为,而不是组织惯性,组织惯性通常包括内部(即时临床实践环境)和外部因素(国家和国际指南和建议),最终导致对优化疾病治疗和治疗方案的抵制。临床医生个体对指南实施和循证原则的抵制可能是导致组织惰性的一个因素。反过来,这种个人行为可以由个人信仰、知识、解释、技能、管理原则和偏见决定。当临床医生遵循最佳实践指南时,不应将术语治疗惰性或临床惰性与从患者角度来看的不依从性混为一谈。3临床惰性已在几个临床领域得到描述,包括糖尿病、4、5高血压、6、7心力衰竭、8抑郁症、9肺科医学,10和复杂的疾病管理。11由于围绕最佳治疗目标的特定信念和态度,临床医生可能会设定次优治疗目标。例如,当治疗患有目前稳定的慢性病的患者时,临床医生可以选择开始次优治疗,因为在稳定的疾病中,升级治疗可能不是优先事项;他们也可能担心过度治疗。其他可能导致临床惰性的因素(即在存在治疗指征的情况下治疗不足)包括与患者、临床环境和组织有关的因素,以及对特定患者进行个性化治疗的重要性。组织惰性是系统对执行的最初全球阻力,这可能会减缓最佳做法的传播和适应,但最终会随着时间的推移而下降。另一方面,在系统级推出基于指南的方法后,个体临床惯性可能会持续存在。创新和最佳实践的传播、实施和适应轨迹如图所示。当指南和医学会在监管机构确定了创新/变革的好处后认可创新或实践变革的适应时,组织和临床惯性可能会阻碍接受。克服系统级变化的惯性需要解决临床医生个人以及实践和组织因素,以确保系统适应。从临床医生的角度来看,提高适应和应对技能的培训和认知干预可以通过
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