Title: Literature Review to Improve Infusion Practice
1Literature Review to Improve Infusion Practice
- Regina Nailon RN, PhD
- Clinical Nurse Researcher
- Nursing Research Quality Outcomes
- The Nebraska Medical Center
2Objectives
- Describe how to define topics for exploration and
retrieve comprehensive literature. - Describe the components of analyzing and
synthesizing a literature review.
3Why Review the Literature?
- Promote lifelong learning and professional
growth. - Identify best practices.
- Conduct evidence based practice projects.
- Prepare research proposals and grant
applications. - Write state of the science journal articles.
4Steps in Literature Review
- Identify a relevant clinical topic.
- Search literature databases.
- Select relevant literature
- research/other sources of evidence.
- Critique the quality of the literature.
- Summarize and synthesize the literature.
5Identifying a Clinical Topic
- Think about your practice, often!
- Clinical issues that make you question your
practice arise frequently. - Are we doing the right thing, the right way, the
right time, with every patient? - Are there gaps in our practice and/or gaps in
achieving optimal outcomes?
6Clinical Topic for aResearch Grant Application
- Many patients leave the hospital with a central
venous catheter in place. - Care is provided in a variety of settings by a
variety of providers. - The need exists to standardize central venous
catheter care given to patients in
out-of-hospital settings to avoid adverse events
and optimize outcomes.
7Clinical Topic Leads to a Clinical Question
- What is known about central venous catheter care
provided in out-of-hospital settings?
8and another
- What is known about the outcomes of central
venous catheter care provided to patients in
out-of-hospital settings?
9and another
- How is central venous catheter care monitored and
how are outcomes measured in patients receiving
care in out-of-hospital settings?
10More Questions
- Are we talking about care provided by patients
themselves? - Familyother caregivershealthcare providers?
- ALL aspects of central line care?
- Accessing, flushing,
- dressing changes
11Candy Store PhenomenonI want it all!
12Dont Give UpWe Just Got Started! (EGBO)
13Everythings Gonna Be Okay
The journey of 1,000 miles begins with a single
step - Lao Tse
The review of literature begins with a
single journal article - Regina Nailon
14Narrowing the Question
- Narrowing your question
- Population of interest
- Setting of interest
- Intervention of interest
- Outcome of interest
- Ask one question at a time!
15Asking a Searchable Question
- PICO format
- Population, Intervention, Comparison
Intervention (if any), Outcome -
Sackett et. al,
1997
16What I really want to know is
- What is known about central venous
catheter-associated adverse events that occur in
patients receiving care in out-of-hospital
settings? - Understanding current state of care outcomes
should reveal aspects of care in need of
standardization.
(Population, Intervention, Comparison
Intervention (if any), Outcome)
17Narrow enough?
- What are central venous catheter-associated
adverse events? - What is care?
- What are out of hospital settings?
18CVC-associated Adverse Events
- Bloodstream infection (CLABSI)
- Occlusion
- Thrombosis
19CVC Care
- Medication Administration
- Infusion, chemotherapy, antibiotics
- Hyperalimentation
- Total parenteral nutrition
- Hydration
20CVC Care
- Infection prevention
- Accessing
- Flushing
- Dressing change
- Troubleshooting complications
21Out of Hospital Settings
- Outpatient infusion center
- Ambulatory care clinic
- Home health
- Skilled nursing facility
- Community based care settings
22Search Terms from PICO Question
- Central venous catheter
- Outpatient / ambulatory / home health
care/skilled nursing/community settings - Infusion
- Hyperalimenation /parenteral nutrition
- Blood stream infection
- Occlusion
- Others..quality, outcomes, adverse event
23Finding Relevant Literature
- Reference librarians
- Electronic Databases
- Free
- Medline www.medline.gov
- Google Scholar www.scholar.google.com
- Subscription access
- Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health
Literature (CINAHL) - Cochrane Library
- SCOPUS
24Electronic Databases
- MEDLINE (PubMed)
- National Library of Medicines database of
citations and abstracts. - Medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary
medicine, health care systems. - Over 5,000 journals indexed including 190
nursing journals. - Coverage generally from 1950.
- Less than 25 of articles are written in a
foreign language.
25Electronic Databases
- Google Scholar
- Searches global catalog of library collections.
- Covers many disciplines and sources
- Articles, theses, books, abstracts
- Academic publishers, professional societies,
online repositories, universities and other web
sites. - Customize to libraries of your choice.Â
26Electronic Databases
- CINAHL
- Database containing nursing and allied health
article citations and abstracts, dissertations
and other materials in the subject areas. - Indexing for more than 5,000 journals.
- Full text for more than 770 journals.
- Full text for more than 275 books/monographs.
27Electronic Databases
- SCOPUS
- The worlds largest abstract and citation
database of peer-reviewed literature. - Contains 47 million records, 70 with abstracts.
- Over 19,500 titles from 5,000 publishers
worldwide. - Includes over 4.6 million conference papers.
- Provides 100 MEDLINE coverage.
28Search Strategy
- Index term search to identify appropriate
terminology - home parenteral nutrition AND infection
- home care AND central venous catheter AND
occlusion - catheterization, central venous AND infection
OR occlusion AND community OR skilled nursing
facility OR clinic OR home care
29Record your Searches
- Record key words/databases searched.
- Years/dates parameters searched.
- Efficient use of time.
- Did you find what you were looking for?
- Re-examine/refine search terms.
30Selecting Relevant LiteratureHow much is enough?
- Exhaustive search ? comprehensive body of
literature on clinical topic. - Examine references for additional sources.
- Search citations.
- Level of evidence
- Retrieve higher levels of evidence,
when possible.
31Selecting Relevant Literature (not all evidence
is created equally)
Strong
- Meta analyses / Systematic reviews
- Randomized controlled trial
- Quasi-experimental
- Correlational (Case-control, Cohort)
- Descriptive, Qualitative
- Expert opinion, textbooks
Weak
32Systematic Reviews and Meta Analyses
- Systematic reviews select, critically appraise,
and synthesize research evidence. - Saves you the work of appraising and assimilating
these numerous studies.
- Meta analysis is similar to a systematic review.
Appraises multiple studies focused on a clinical
issue. - Uses statistical methods to summarize results of
multiple studies focusing on same issue. - Overall summary statistic that represents the
effects of the intervention across all the
studies reviewed.
33Critiquing Literature
- Build a table of evidence, one article at a time.
- Enables a systematic approach to organizing
literature. - Requires engaged, critical review of every source
of evidence retrieved from literature search. - Publication does not mean it was conducted with
rigor. - Level I done poorly is not as strong as Level V
done rigorously.
34Critiquing Literature
- Critique each source of evidence.
- Level of evidence / research design.
- Rigor - was it a high quality study?
- Bias - are findings trustworthy?
- Is the evidence applicable to your patient
situation? (PICO) - Use framework for critiquing.
- AGREE II Instrument to critically appraise
evidence based guidelines. http//www.agreetrust.o
rg/
35Critiquing a Quantitative Design Research Study
Citation (author(s), year, title, volume, issue, pages ____________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ Purpose of Study _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ Research Question / Hypothesis _____________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ Setting ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Sample __________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ How were subjects recruited? ________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Sample size ______________________________________ Was power analysis done? _______Level of Power___________________ Bias Describe any bias that may have been introduced into sample selection ___________ _________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Describe if/how investigator controlled for this bias _____________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ Describe how subjects were randomized into the study or into the treatment(experimental) group(s) ____________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Describe any bias that may have been introduced into subject assignment to treatment group(s) _________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Describe if/how investigator controlled for this bias _____________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Study Variables Describe the Independent Variable (what is being manipulated?)_______________________________________________________________ Describe the Dependent Variable(s) _________________________________________ Describe any Extraneous Variables _________________________________________ How did the investigator control for these? ___________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Data Collection What data were collected? _________________________________________________ Instrument(s) used _______________________________________________________ Validity/Reliability of data collection instruments ______________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Bias Describe any bias that may have been introduced into data collection___________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Describe if/how investigator controlled for this bias _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ Results. Describe the findings of the study ____________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Describe Implications Study Findings have for Practice or Policy __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ How likely is it that a Type I or Type II error occurred? Explain. __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Describe Study Limitations __________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________ Would you recommend findings to support practice in your facility? Yes___ No ___ Explain rationale ____________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________
Nailon, R. (2009). Referenes Craig, J.,
Smyth, R. (2007). The evidence-based practice
manual for nurses (2nd ed). Edinburgh Churchill
Livingstone. Polit, D., Beck, C. (2008).Nursing
research Generating and assessing evidence for
nursing practice (8th ed.). Philadelphia
Lippincott. Rosswurm, M.A. Larrabee, J.H.
(1999). A model for change to evidence-based
practice. Image Jnl of Nursing Scholarship
31(4), 317-22.
36Putting it all Together
- Make notes as you read.
- Use diagrams or outlines to list the main points.
- Develop grid/table of evidence.
- Categorize sources of evidence by
- Similarities / contradictions across
studies/sources of evidence. - Organize themes.
- Chronologically, conceptually.
37CVC-related infections in home health patients CVC-related infections in home health patients CVC-related infections in home health patients
Citation Shah et al. (2002). Central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections in pediatric oncology home care. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology 23(2), 99-101. Tokars et al. (1999). Prospective evaluation of risk factors for bloodstream infection in patients receiving home infusion therapy. Annals of Internal Medicine, 131(5), 340-347.
Study Design / Level of Evidence I - Meta analysis II RCT III Quasi-experimental IV Correlational, case control or cohort V - Qualitative, or Descriptive VI Expert opinion, Textbook, IV retrospective, case control study. IV prospective, observational cohort study.
Research question/ Purpose/Aims To describe the epidemiology of and risk factors for CVC-associated BSI and to characterize the pediatric population with high use of CVCs. To determine rates of and risk factors for BSI in patients receiving home infusion therapy.
Sample and Setting 26 pediatric oncology patients with CVCs receiving services from dept of home care of the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia and 26 pediatric oncology patients with CVCs cared for in the hospital, who had a CVC-related BSI during study period January 1, 1998 through June 30, 1998. 354 oncology and home TPN patients receiving infusion through a central or a midline catheter from 1 of 5 home agencies in Ontario, Canada and 473 patients from 4 hospitals who received infusion therapy from the home care agency affiliated with the Cleveland clinic Foundation in Cleveland, Ohio.
Data collection (Include description of instruments used if applicable) Data collected from chart review. Case patients identified as those who presented with CVC-BSI more than 48 hours after admission to home care. Control Prospective collection of data from infusion agency records and patient interviews. Infection form completed when BSI was suspected. BSI 1 or more blood cultures, antimicrobial tx or catheter removal, and no infection at another site that could have caused the bacteremia.
Findings No statistically significant difference in primary CVC management between groups (96 each, done by parents). No statistically significant differences between diagnoses, age, other pt characteristics. Home care (case) patients had higher rate than controls of CVC BSI/1000 device days (5.8versus 4.3). Not significant. Higher proportion of home care BSI attributed to gram-negative rods versus gram-positive organisms found in majority of control BSIs. Case patients more likely than controls to require blood product transfusions. 69 BSIs occurred in 59 patients. Risk factors for BSI included bone marrow transplant, TPN, receipt of infusion therapy in clinic or physician office, multi-lumen catheters. BSI rate increased with risk factors a patient had. BSI rates for patients with no risk factors 0.16/1,000 device days with 1 risk factor .46 with 2 risk factors 2.22 with 3 or more risk factors 6.77
Limitations Small sample size, short time of study period did not enable examination of catheter type or of clinical practice and the effect these may have on BSIs. Did not analyze/report BSI rates by central catheter vs midline. Midline catheters comprised 155 (16) of sample. Subsequent BSIs not counted if pt had gt1 BSI with same central line and/or same pathogen as 1st BSI
38CVC-related occlusions in home health patients CVC-related occlusions in home health patients CVC-related occlusions in home health patients
Citation
Study Design and Level of Evidence I - Meta analysis II Randomized Controlled Trial III Quasi-experimental IV Correlational study (case control or cohort), Qualitative, or Descriptive V Expert opinion, Textbook, Non-research article
Research question/ Purpose/Aims
Sample and Setting
Data collection (Include description of instruments used if applicable)
Findings
Implications for practice
Limitations
39CVC-related infections out pt settings NOT home CVC-related infections out pt settings NOT home CVC-related infections out pt settings NOT home
Citation Tokars et al. (1999). Prospective evaluation of risk factors for bloodstream infection in patients receiving home infusion therapy. Annals of Internal Medicine, 131(5), 340-347.
Study Design and Level of Evidence I - Meta analysis II Randomized Controlled Trial III Quasi-experimental IV Correlational study (case control or cohort), Qualitative, or Descriptive V Expert opinion, Textbook, Non-research article IV prospective, observational cohort study.
Research question/ Purpose/Aims To determine rates of and risk factors for BSI in patients receiving home infusion therapy.
Sample and Setting 354 oncology and home TPN patients receiving infusion through a central or a midline catheter from 1 of 5 home agencies in Ontario, Canada and 473 patients from 4 hospitals who received infusion therapy from the home care agency affiliated with the Cleveland clinic Foundation in Cleveland, Ohio.
Data collection (Include description of instruments used if applicable) Prospective collection of data from infusion agency records and patient interviews. Infection form completed when BSI was suspected. BSI 1 or more blood cultures, antimicrobial tx or catheter removal, and no infection at another site that could have caused the bacteremia.
Findings 69 BSIs occurred in 59 patients. Risk factors for BSI included bone marrow transplant, TPN, receipt of infusion therapy in clinic or physician office, multi-lumen catheters. BSI rate increased with risk factors a patient had. BSI rates for patients with no risk factors 0.16/1,000 device days with 1 risk factor .46 with 2 risk factors 2.22 with 3 or more risk factors 6.77
Limitations Did not analyze/report BSI rates by central catheter vs midline. Midline catheters comprised 155 (16) of sample. Subsequent BSIs not counted if pt had gt1 BSI with same central line and/or same pathogen as 1st BSI
40Summary of Literature
- Re-iterates what literature tells us.
- Broad, general overview/summary of each article.
- Highlights authors key points/findings.
- Summarizes one article or source of evidence at a
time. - No synthesis or attempt at weaving together
multiple sources into own interpretation. - Often reads as choppy or disjointed.
41Literature Summary
- Shah et al. (2002) conducted a case control study
to describe the epidemiology - of and potential risk factors for CVC-associated
BSI and characteristics of the - pediatric population with high use of CVCs. 26
pediatric oncology patients (case - patients) with CVCs receiving home infusion
therapy who experienced a BSI were - compared with 26 hospitalized pediatric oncology
patients (control patients) with - CVCs receiving infusion therapy who did not
experience a BSI. Data were collected - over a 6-month period. No statistically
significant difference in primary CVC - management was found between the groups (care
provided by parents in 96 of - patients in each group). No statistically
significant differences were found between - diagnoses, age, or type of CVC. Home care (case)
patients had higher rate than - controls of CVC BSI/1,000 device days (5.8 versus
4.3), but this was not statistically - significant. A higher proportion of home care
BSIs were attributed to gram-negative - rods versus gram-positive organisms found in
majority of control BSIs. Case patients - were more likely than controls to require blood
product transfusions but the study - design was not intended to examine causation. The
study was limited by the small - sample size. The short study period did not
enable examination of catheter type or of - clinical practices and the effect these may have
on BSIs.
42Literature Summary
- Tokars et al., (1999) conducted a prospective,
observational cohort study to - determine rates of and risk factors for BSI in
patients receiving home - infusion therapy through a central or a midline
catheter. Data were collected - from a total of 827 patients over a 13-month time
period. The investigators - found that 69 BSIs occurred in 59 patients. Five
risk factors found to be - independently significant included previous BSI,
bone marrow transplantation, - receipt of TPN, receipt of infusion therapy in
clinic or physician office, multi- - lumen catheters. BSI rate per 1,000 central line
days increased with number - of risk factors a patient had ranging from 0.16
in patients with no risk factors - to 6.77 in patients with 3 or more risk factors.
The investigators did not report - BSI rates by catheter type, nor did they count
patients subsequent BSIs if the - patient had the same catheter and/or same
pathogen as in their first BSI.
43Literature Synthesis
- Integrates literature into a narrative which
illustrates own understanding of the key
concepts. Bloom et
al., 1956 - Points out similarities and contrasting
information. - Highlights key points with own conclusions woven
throughout. - Emphasizes insights gained and knowledge gaps
that remain. - Your voice is heard along with the presentation
of what the literature tells us.
44Literature Synthesis
- Multiple studies have examined CVC-associated
BSIs in patients - receiving home infusion therapy. Receipt of CVC
infusion therapy - in the home setting has been associated with
higher BSI rates than - those found in hospitalized patients, (Shah et
al., 2002), but lower - BSI rates than those found in patients receiving
infusion therapy in - a physician office or infusion clinic (Tokars et
al., 1999). There is a - lack of research examining the influence that
clinical practices and - type of CVC may have on the incidence of BSIs in
patients with - CVCs receiving infusions in out of hospital
settings.
45Synthesizing Literature
- Putting it all together, one sentence at a time
- One paragraph at a time
- One section at a time
- One manuscript(masterpiece) at a time!
- Organization of content is key!
46(No Transcript)
47Why go to all this work?
- Uncovering and implementing best practices is
critical to optimizing patient outcomes. - What the literature doesnt contain is just as
important as what the literature reveals about
the clinical topic. - Uncovering gaps in knowledge is critical to
determining research needs.
48Selected References
- Bloom, B.S., Engelhart, M. D., Furst, E. J.,
Hill, W. H., Krathwohl, D.R. (1956). Taxonomy
of educational objectives the classification of
educational goals Handbook I Cognitive Domain.
New York Longmans, Green. - Sackett, D.L., Strauss, S.E., Richardson, W.S.,
Haynes, R. B. (1997). Evidence based medicine
How to practice and teach EBM (2nd ed.). London
Churchill Livingstone. - Shah, S., Manning, M., Leahy, E., Magnusson, M.,
Rheingold, S. Bell, L. (2002). Central venous
catheter-associated bloodstream infections in
pediatric oncology home care. Infection Control
and Hospital Epidemiology 23(2), 99-101. - Tokars, J., Cookson, S., McArthur,M., Boyer, C.,
McGreer, A.. Jarvis, W. (1999). Prospective
evaluation of risk factors for bloodstream
infection in patients receiving home infusion
therapy. Annals of Internal Medicine, 131(5),
340-347.
49Questions? in PICO format, please (just
kidding)