缩小质量差距:重新审视科学现状(第5卷:作为质量改进战略的公共报告)。

Annette M Totten, Jesse Wagner, Arpita Tiwari, Christen O'Haire, Jessica Griffin, Miranda Walker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:本综述的目的是评估卫生保健质量信息公开报告作为质量改进策略的有效性。我们试图确定公开报告是否能改善医疗服务提供和患者预后。我们还考虑了公开报告是否会影响患者或医疗保健提供者的行为。最后,我们评估了公开报告的特征和背景是否会影响公开报告的影响。数据来源:1980年至2011年间的文章通过以下书目数据库进行检索:MEDLINE®,Embase, EconLit, PsychINFO, Business Source Premier, CINAHL, PAIS, Cochrane系统评价数据库,EPOC研究登记,DARE, NHS EED, HEED, NYAM灰色文献报告数据库和其他来源(专家,参考文献列表和灰色文献)。回顾方法:我们根据我们对公开报道的定义制定的纳入和排除标准筛选引文。我们最初没有排除任何基于研究设计的研究。在通过标题和摘要分类确定的11,809条引用中,我们筛选和审查了1,632篇文章。共有97项定量研究和101项定性研究被纳入、摘要、入表和评估。结果和方法的异质性阻碍了正式的定量综合。系统评价用于识别研究,但其结论未纳入本综述。结果:对于大多数结果,可用于评估公开报告影响的证据强度是中等的。这部分是由于研究人员在设计和开展关于人口水平干预影响的研究时面临的方法挑战。公开报告与医疗保健绩效指标的改善有关,如疗养院比较中所包括的指标。几乎所有已确定的研究都没有发现公开报告影响患者或其代表对医疗保健提供者的选择的证据,或只有微弱的证据。对卫生保健提供者对公开报告的反应的研究表明,当绩效数据公开时,他们会参与提高质量的活动。在考虑质量改进活动的传播时可能很重要的公开报告的特点和背景很少得到研究,甚至很少得到描述。结论:结果的异质性和大多数结果的中等强度的证据使得很难得出明确的结论。然而,一些观察结果得到了现有研究的支持。公开报告更有可能与卫生保健提供者行为的变化有关,而不是与患者或家属选择卫生保健提供者有关。公开报告的质量度量会随着时间的推移而改进。尽管公众报道的评论员和批评者经常引用潜在危害,但对危害的研究数量有限,大多数研究都没有证实潜在危害。
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Closing the quality gap: revisiting the state of the science (vol. 5: public reporting as a quality improvement strategy).

Objectives: The goal of this review was to evaluate the effectiveness of public reporting of health care quality information as a quality improvement strategy. We sought to determine if public reporting results in improvements in health care delivery and patient outcomes. We also considered whether public reporting affects the behavior of patients or of health care providers. Finally we assessed whether the characteristics of the public reports and the context affect the impact of public reports.

Data sources: Articles available between 1980 and 2011 were identified through searches of the following bibliographical databases: MEDLINE®, Embase, EconLit, PsychINFO, Business Source Premier, CINAHL, PAIS, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, EPOC Register of Studies, DARE, NHS EED, HEED, NYAM Grey Literature Report database, and other sources (experts, reference lists, and gray literature).

Review methods: We screened citations based on inclusion and exclusion criteria developed based on our definition of public reporting. We initially did not exclude any studies based on study design. Of the 11,809 citations identified through title and abstract triage, we screened and reviewed 1,632 articles. A total of 97 quantitative and 101 qualitative studies were included, abstracted, entered into tables, and evaluated. The heterogeneity of outcomes as well as methods prohibited formal quantitative synthesis. Systematic reviews were used to identify studies, but their conclusions were not incorporated into this review.

Results: For most of the outcomes, the strength of the evidence available to assess the impact of public reporting was moderate. This was due in part to the methodological challenges researchers face in designing and conducting research on the impact of population-level interventions. Public reporting is associated with improvement in health care performance measures such as those included in Nursing Home Compare. Almost all identified studies found no evidence or only weak evidence that public reporting affects the selection of health care providers by patients or their representatives. Studies of health care providers' response to public reports suggest they engage in activities to improve quality when performance data are made public. Characteristics of public reports and the context, which are likely to be important when considering the diffusion of quality improvement activities, were rarely studied or even described.

Conclusions: The heterogeneity of the outcomes and the moderate strength of evidence for most outcomes make it difficult to draw definitive conclusions. However, some observations were supported by existing research. Public reporting is more likely to be associated with changes in health care provider behaviors than with selection of health services providers by patients or families. Quality measures that are publicly reported improve over time. Although the potential for harms is frequently cited by commentators and critics of public reporting, the amount of research on harms is limited and most studies do not confirm the potential harm.

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