Title: A COMMON APPROACH
1 Developing Evidence-Based Guidelines for Health
Protection - An overview of the process -
A COMMON APPROACH ALEX SANCHEZ-VIVAR
2Moriarty Everything I have to say has already
crossed your mind. Sherlock Probably my
answer has crossed yours.
3Presentation Overview
- Intro the Health Protection Network (HPN)
- Why does Evidence-Based Practice matter to us?
- Rationale background
- 3. A systematic approach to produce guidance for
HP in Scotland - Development of evidence-based guidelines
41. The Health Protection Network (HPN) in
Scotland
The Health Protection Network (HPN) is a network
of existing professional organisations and
networks in the health protection community
across Scotland. It aims to promote, sustain,
and coordinate good practice. The HPN does this
by adopting, promoting and disseminating a
systematic approach to develop evidence-based
guidelines, as well as by ensuring an appropriate
workforce development plan is in place and
complied with.
5- MEMBERSHIP
-
- Scottish CPHM (CD/EH) Group
- Health Protection Nurses Specialist (Scotland)
Network - (HPNS)
- Health Protection Scotland (HPS)
- Infection Prevention Society (IPS)
- The Royal Environmental Health Institute of
Scotland - (REHIS)
- Scottish Infection Research Network (SIRN)
- Scottish Microbiology Virology Network (SMVN)
and the - Scottish Clinical Virology Consultants Group
(SCVG) - Scottish Public Health Network (ScotPHN)
- Society of Chief Officers of Environmental
Health (SoCOEH) - Health Protection Education Programme (HPS/NES)
- Public Representative
6- Why does evidence-based practice matter to us?
7Rise of Evidence-Based Medicine
- First described in 1992
- A new approach to teaching medicine
- A revolution in medical practice
- Other evidence-based approaches ethics,
psychotherapy, occupational therapy, dentistry,
nursing, and librarianship
8Factors Driving EBM
- Overwhelming size of the literature
- Inadequacy of textbooks
- Difficulty synthesizing evidence and translating
into practice - Increased number of RCTs
- Available computerized databases
- Reproducible evidence strategies
9Definition of EBM
- The integration of best research evidence with
clinical expertise and patient values.
10Steps of EBM
- Convert the need for info. into an answerable
question - Track down the best evidence
- Critically appraise that evidence
- Integrate the appraisal with ones clinical
expertise and the individual patient - Evaluate
Sackett DL. EBM how to practice and teach EBM.
Churchill Livingstone 2000
11Critique of EBM
- De-emphasizes patient values
- Doesnt account for individual variation
- Devalues clinical judgment
- Leads to therapeutic nihilism
12Development of EBPH
- Jenicek (1997) published a review discussing
epidemiology, EBM, EBPH - Epidemiology described as the foundation of both
EBM and EBPH - EBPH unique in using complex interventions with
multiple community and societal issues
13Definition of EBPH (1)
- EBPH is the conscientious, explicit, and
judicious use of current best evidence in making
decisions about the care of communities and
populations in the domain of health protection,
disease prevention, health maintenance and
improvement. -
- Jenicek (1997)
14- Strong evidence supports that
- teaching is not effective on Friday afternoons
-
15Interpretation of communications
- Trust? source
- Evidence Identified and synthesised?
- Recommendations link with the evidence?
- Validation ? improve practice? ? implementation
16Health Care / Medical Sciences Literature -
Half of what we are taught as medical students
will in ten years have been shown to be wrong.
The trouble is, none of teachers knows which
half. Dr Sydney Burrell, Dean of Harvard
Medical School (2000)
17Concepts
Good Practice GUIDELINES Systematically
developed statements to assist practitioner and
patient (public) decisions about appropriate
public health interventions
for specific circumstances Derived from
Institute of Medicine Committee to Advise the
Public Health Service on Clinical Practice
Guidelines. Clinical Practice Guidelines
Directions for a new program. Washington DC
National Academy Press, 1990.
18Concepts
What makes a good guideline?
- Should provide extensive, critical and
well-balanced information on the benefits and
limitations of various interventions so that the
practitioner can carefully judge individual
cases - Derived from
- Subcommittee of WHO. Summary of the 1993 WHO.
- BMJ 1993 307 1541-1546
19Concepts
Guidelines Purpose
- To make explicit recommendations with a definite
intent to influence what physicians do - Derived from
- Hayward RSA, Wilson MC, Tunis SR, Bass EB,
Guyatt G, for the Evidence-Based Medicine
Working Group. Users guides to the Medical
Literature. VIII How to use Clinical Practice
Guidelines. A Are the Recommendations Valid?
JAMA 1995lt 274gt 570-574
20Criteria
What makes a good guideline?
- Valid
- Reproducible
- Cost-effective
- Representative / multidisciplinary
- Clinically applicable
- Flexible
- Clear
- Reviewable
- Amenable to clinical audit
-
NHS Executive. Clinical Guidelines. Leeds NHSE,
1996
21Potential benefits of Good Practice Guidelines
- For the public / patients
- For healthcare professionals
- For healthcare systems
-
Adapted from Woolf SH et al. Potential benefits,
limitations and harms of clinical guidelines. BMJ
1999 318 527-530
22Potential benefits for patients / the
public Better quality of care Improve health
outcomes Improve consistency of care Inform
patients / public about what health professionals
should be doing Empower public to
make more informed choices Influence public
policy Promote distributive justice
23Potential benefits for healthcare
professionals Better quality of management
decisions Reassure healthcare professionals that
practice / intervention is
appropriate Provide explicit recommendations to
guide care / public health
interventions Reduce outdated, ineffective or
wasteful practice Support quality improvement
initiatives Inform the research agenda by
highlighting gaps in evidence
24Potential benefits for healthcare
systems Improve efficiency Optimise value for
money Demonstrate adherence to guidelines may
improve public image
25What can GUIDELINES offer to improve the
standard of practice?
- Provide clear statements and standards for the
delivery of care/service locally - Clarify roles and responsibilities
- Support the implementation of evidence-based
practice - Promotes high quality, effective care / service
- Support risk assessment and management
- Provide opportunities for the public to become
involved in developing services - Provide a source of information for the CG
Committee - Provide audit information
- Promote high quality record keeping
26- How are evidence-based guidelines developed?
- Identifying and refining the subject area of a
guideline - Running guideline development groups
- Identifying and assessing the evidence
- Translating evidence into a clinical practice
guideline - Reviewing and updating guidelines
Shekelle PG, Woolf SH, Eccles M, Grimshaw J.
Developing guidelines. BMJ 1999 42 67-81
27GUIDELINE DEVELOPMENT PROCESS
Looking at how
28HPS Proposal
GUIDELINE DEVELOPMENT PROCESS
TOPIC SELECTION SCOPE
COMPOSITION OF THE GUIDELINE DEVELOPMENT GROUP
Subject Groups Evidence Editing Review
IDENTIFICATION EVALUATION OF EVIDENCE
FORMATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS GRADING
DEFINE RESOURCE CONSEQUENCES
CONSULTATION PEER REVIEW
EDIT PUBLICATION
FORMULATION OF AUDIT PEER REVIEW
CPD
29Health Protection Network (HPN) Guideline
Development Framework
302. A systematic approach to produce guidance for
HP in Scotland Development of evidence-based
guidelines
- Developing guidelines de novo
- Guidelines on Management of Legionella outbreaks
and clusters in the community (
in collaboration with SIGN ) - Guidelines on Prophylaxis and Management of
Rabies in Humans - Adapting existing guidelines
- 2.1. From a validated group of guidelines
- Guidelines on Risk Communication (appraisal
of 7 guidelines) - 2.2. Local adaptation of one validated
guideline - Guidelines on Tuberculosis (based on the NICE
guidelines) - 2.3. Review / revision of existing (older) local
Scottish Guidance - Guidance on managing E coli O157
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32A guideline which fulfils all the institute's
requirements is like the Holy Grail worth
striving for,
but unattainable by mere
mortals
GENE FEDER,
St
Bartholomew's and the Royal London Medical
College, 1993
33Development of evidence-based guidelines
- Topic selection and Scope
- Completion of the GDG
- Identification and evaluation of the evidence
- Appraisal tools (SIGN 50)
- AGREE instrument
- 4. Formulation of recommendations
- 5. Editing, publishing and implementing
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353. Challenges in developing E-B Guidelines for
health protection
. .
Resources Stakeholders capacity in harmony with business continuity Training issues Prioritisation criteria
Quality Assurance Competence in search strategy / appraisal skills Criteria to quality assure our own guidance
Pool of Evidence Intrinsic limitations in the hierarchy of evidence Interpretation of epidemiological evidence Integration of extrapolated and induced evidence
Grading of Recommendations Limitations in adopting conventional grading of recommendations Value of expert opinion shared knowledge from practice
Consultation and Peer Review Access to experts Consultation beyond geographical boundaries Applicability and implementation issues
. .
36- Challenges in grading recommendations
- Intrinsic to the nature of Health Protection (1
of 2)
Formulating recommendations
RCT
Systematic Reviews
Pool of Evidence Hierarchy of evidence
Grading
Cohort
Case control
Strength of recommendation (1) A high level of
evidence B C D GPP Good Practice Point
Case series
Case Report
E-B Guidelines on Health Protection HPN / HPS
Legislation Codes of Practice
Grey Literature
(1) Grades of Recommendation from SIGN 50. Jan
2008
37- Challenges in grading recommendations
- Intrinsic to the nature of HP (2 of 2)
E-B Guidelines for Health Protection
no no some D GPP
?
384. Key Considerations
- Good understanding of whats needed to produce
good quality guidelines - Provide clear statements and standards for the
delivery of care/service - Clarify roles and responsibilities
- Support the implementation of evidence-based
practice - Promotes high quality, effective care / service
- Propose a validated method to systematically
produce guidelines and test it test it test
it - acknowledge limitations investment /
prioritisation - try resolve the scientific challenges amongst
the wider community - A path to solution
- Collaboration (NICE/SIGN RKI/ECDC HPA)
39 Thanks
Alex Sánchez-Vivar alex.sanchez-vivar_at_nhs.net
In order to move forward, we need two legs
action and reflection Gaudi
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41What are evidence based guidelines?
Mechanisms to improve the quality of health
care and decrease costs and
utilisation Recommendations devised to influence
decisions about health
interventions Tools to outline procedures
which
operate the implementation of evidence-based
practice
Decision tools to close gaps between current and
optimal practice
42Good Practice GUIDELINES Derived from
Institute of Medicine Committee to Advise the
Public Health Service on Clinical Practice
Guidelines. Clinical Practice Guidelines
Directions for a new program. Washington DC
National Academy Press, 1990.
Systematically developed statements to assist
practitioners (and public) to make decisions
about appropriate public health interventions
for specific
circumstances
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