research utilization m6728 class4 thanks to dr. elaine larson for many of these slides

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Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

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Page 1: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Research Utilization

M6728

Class4

Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Page 2: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Idea to Implementation

• Before 1920 30 years

• Until 1965 9 years

• 1980s 2-5 years

• Now Depends

Page 3: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Research Utilization

Why does it take so long?

Page 4: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Antisepsis as a Case Study

• Holmes, U.S.• 1840-82• Direct transmission of

infection• Ridiculed by peers

• Semmelweis, Austria• 1845-61• Hands as transmitter

of infections• Lost his job

Page 5: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Antisepsis

• Nightingale, England• 1854-90• Importance of

sanitation and clean environment

• Despite resistance, had success

• Lister, Scotland• 1856-85• Antiseptic surgery• Acceptable within a

few years

Page 6: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Stages of Innovation

• Awareness (knowledge)

• Persuasion (belief)

• Occasional Use

• Regular Use

(Brett, 1987)

Page 7: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Adoption of Practices (n=216)

010

2030

405060

7080

90100

IV TF Urine Pain Goal

AwareImplement

Page 8: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Why Don’t Nurses Use Research?

Don’t know about the findings: 11% nurses read a journal

weekly, 41% monthly (Retsas, 2000)

Page 9: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Why Don’t Nurses Use Research?

Don’t understand or cannot assess

the findings

Page 10: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Varying PerspectivesResearcher Clinician

• Comfort with probability and tentative answers

• Wants to discover common patterns and similarities

• Goal to extend general knowledge

• Seeks/needs clear prescriptions

• Views each patient as unique

• Wants to apply knowledge

Page 11: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Why Don’t Nurses Use Research?

They don’t believe the findings

Page 12: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

What Does It Take to Change Practice?

• Dissatisfaction with present situation

• Perception that there are or could be acceptable alternatives

• Confidence in ability to change

Page 13: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Why Don’t Nurses Use Research?

They don’t know how to apply the findings

Page 14: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Differing SkillsResearcher Nurse Consumer• Generates questions• Develops designs and

methods• Collects and analyzes

data• Interprets data• Communicates

findings

• Generates questions• Uses knowledge for

patient care• Evaluates relevance

and utility of studies• Transfers information

to practice• Evaluates effects

Page 15: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Why Don’t Nurses Use Research?

There aren’t any findings

Page 16: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Survey of 400 Nurses

• What would help nurses use research?

• Most prevalent response: RESEARCH THAT IS RELEVANT AND APPLICABLE

(Retsas, 2000)

Page 17: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Why Don’t Nurses Use Research?

They are not allowed to use the

findings

Page 18: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

It’s changing*….

• Survey of 204 critical care nurses, 1999

• 11/12 practice innovations being used

*Thompson, NINR State-of-Science Congress, 9/99

Page 19: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Correlates of research use*….

• Positive: individual innovativeness, using communication channels

• Negative: years of nursing experience

*Thompson, State-of-Science Congress

Page 20: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Barriers to Implementation

• Failure of researchers to communicate

• Divisions between education, research, practice

• Studies lack relevance to practice

• Confusion about conduct and use

• Disparity in education of nurses

• Institutional barriers

Page 21: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Assessing Relevance to Practice

• Evaluate quality of scientific base

• Assess relevance to the practice setting

• Determine potential for evaluation

Page 22: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Possible Outcomes

• May meet its goal, solve a problem

• May result in no noticeable change

• May be harmful and need to be stopped

• Results may be totally unexpected

Page 23: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

WICHE

• First major utilization project, mid-1970s

• Funded by Division of Nursing

• Five phases: recruitment, workshop, change agent, second workshop after 5 months, followup

• Difficulty finding clinical studies

• Three published reports

Page 24: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

CURN

• 1975-80, Mich State Nurses’ Assoc

• 34 hospitals participated

• Structured, formal organizational process

• Required organizational commitment, resources, research expertise

Page 25: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Assumptions of CURN Model

• Organization must be committed

• Visible, potent, enduring mechanisms vital

• Substantial resources necessary

• Planned change is essential

• Two or more studies are required to support change

Page 26: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Ten CURN Clinical Protocols

• Preop teaching, decubitus prevention

• Reducing diarhhea in tube-fed patients

• Clean intermittent urinary cath

• Mutual goal setting, reducing pain

• Stress reduction, IV cannula change

• Preop sensory preparation

• Lactose free diet

Page 27: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Criteria for Using Research:CURN

• Evaluating and integrating studies for the research base– Replication (at least two studies)– Scientific merit– Risk

Page 28: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Criteria for Using Research:CURN

• Relevance– Clinical merit– Clinical control– Feasibility– Cost benefits

Page 29: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Criteria for Using Research:CURN

• Potential for Clinical Evaluation

Page 30: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Stetler/Marram Model

• 1976

• For use by individual practitioners as well as organizations

• Pragmatic, most widely used

Page 31: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Assumptions of Stetler/Marram

• Formal organizations may or may not be involved

• Research provides probabilistic information, not absolutes

• Includes experience and theory

• Lack of knowledge of utilization can inhibit effective use

Page 32: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Six Phases: Stetler/Marram

• Preparation

• Validation

• Comparative Evaluation– Fit of setting, Feasibility– Substantiating evidence, Current practice

• Decision making

• Translation/Application

• Evaluation

Page 33: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Research Utilization versus Evidence Based Practice

• Are these the same or different?

Page 34: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Forms of Research Utilization

• INSTRUMENTAL: concrete application to practice

• CONCEPTUAL: enlightment, changes understanding

• SYMBOLIC: legitimates current practice or position

Page 35: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

What Do You Decide?

• Use

• Consider use

• Delay use

• Forget it

Page 36: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

AHRQ and Clinical Practice Guidelines

• AHCPR established 1989 to enhance quality, appropriateness and effectiveness of health care services

• Guidelines developed between 1990-96

• Each guideline has– full guideline and quick reference for

practitioner – consumer guide

Page 37: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Guideline Development Process

• Extensive interdisciplinary clinical review of needs, practices, emerging technology

• Comprehensive literature review

• Ranking of evidence quality

• Peer review of guideline drafts

• Pilot review with intended users

Page 38: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

AHRQ Guideline Topics

• Acute pain management

• Alzheimer’s disease

• Benign prostate hyperplasia

• Cancer pain

• Cardiac rehabilitation

• Cataract

• Depression

Page 39: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Guidelines, cont.

• Heart failure

• Low back problems

• Mammography

• Otitis media

• Post-stroke rehabilitation

• Pressure ulcers

• Sickle cell disease

Page 40: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Guidelines, cont.

• Smoking cessation

• Unstable angina

• Urinary incontinence

Page 41: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Oh, oh: Political Problems

No more specific guidelines

Page 42: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Practice Guidelines as Evidence-based Information

• Systematically developed statements to assist practitioner and patient decisions about appropriate healthcare for specific clinical circumstances (IOM, 1990)

• Science based• Explicit, yet flexible• Developed by practitioners• Subject to revision

Page 43: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Evidence-based Practice Centers (EPCs)

• 12 EPCs established in 1997• Promote evidence-based practice in

everyday care• Develop evidence reports and technology

assessments• AHRQ serves as “science partner” to

improve quality, effectiveness, and appropriateness of clinical care

Page 44: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Next Iteration

• Evidence-based Practice Centers: Examples– Evaluation of cervical cytology

– Treatment of attention deficit disorder

– Treatment of acute sinusitis

– Pharmacotherapy for alcohol dependence

– Testosterone suppression treatment for prostatic cancer

– Swallowing problems in elderly

– Assessing cost-effectiveness of interventions

– Assessing translation of evidence into practice

Page 45: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

National Guideline Clearinghouse

Agency for Healthcare Research

and Quality

(AHRQ)

Page 46: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Other Research-Based Guidelines

• CDC– http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/publicat.htm– Isolation precautions, prevention of IV-related

infections, prevention of nosocomial pneumonia, prevention of spread of VRE, prevention of surgical site infections, personnel health

• Professional Organizations

Page 47: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

The National Guideline Clearinghouse™

• Partnership with AAHP and AMA• Web-based repository for clinical practice

guidelines• Objective is to provide “one stop shopping” for

consumers and providers seeking to access and keep abreast of the many guidelines in use

• Allows comparisons of guidelines with different content and recommendations

Page 48: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

For Utilization Project

• Stetler C. Refinement of the Stetler/Marram model for application of research findings to practice. Nurs Outlook 1994; 42:15-25.

• Stetler C, et al. Enhancing research utilization by clinical nurse specialists. Nurs Clin NA 1995; 30:457-473.

Page 49: Research Utilization M6728 Class4 Thanks to Dr. Elaine Larson for many of these slides

Other Published Reviews and Recommendations

• Qualitative, non-systematic, narrative– Process is not clear-cut in how literature was

selected

• Systematic

• Meta-analysis