2,073 results on '"Shekelle Paul"'
Search Results
2. Interventions to Reduce Loneliness in Community-Living Older Adults: a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
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Shekelle, Paul, Miake-Lye, Isomi, Begashaw, Meron, Booth, Marika, Myers, Bethany, Lowery, Nicole, and Shrank, William
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loneliness ,meta-analysis ,social determinants of health ,Humans ,Loneliness ,Aged ,Independent Living ,Social Support ,Social Isolation - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The problem of loneliness has garnered increased attention from policymakers, payors, and providers due to higher rates during the pandemic, particularly among seniors. Prior systematic reviews have in general not been able to reach conclusions about effectiveness of interventions. METHODS: Computerized databases were searched using broad terms such as loneliness or lonely or social isolation or social support from Jan 1, 2011 to June 23, 2021. We reference mined existing systematic reviews for additional and older studies. The Social Interventions Research & Evaluation Network database and Google were searched for gray literature on Feb 4, 2022. Eligible studies were RCTs and observational studies of interventions to reduce loneliness in community-living adults that used a validated loneliness scale; studies from low- or middle-income countries were excluded, and studies were excluded if restricted to populations where all persons had the same disease (such as loneliness in persons with dementia). RESULTS: A total of 5971 titles were reviewed and 60 studies were included in the analysis, 36 RCTs and 24 observational studies. Eleven RCTs and 5 observational studies provided moderate certainty evidence that group-based treatment was associated with reduced loneliness (standardized mean difference for RCTs = - 0.27, 95% CI - 0.48, - 0.08). Five RCTs and 5 observational studies provided moderate certainty evidence that internet training was associated with reduced loneliness (standardized mean difference for RCTs = - 0.22, 95% CI - 0.30, - 0.14). Low certainty evidence suggested that group exercises may be associated with very small reductions in loneliness. Evidence was insufficient to reach conclusions about group-based activities, individual in-person interactions, internet-delivered interventions, and telephone-delivered interventions. DISCUSSION: Low-to-moderate certainty evidence exists that group-based treatments, internet training, and possibly group exercises are associated with modest reductions in loneliness in community-living older adults. These findings can inform the design of supplemental benefits and the implementation of evidence-based interventions to address loneliness. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION NUMBER: PROSPERO ( CRD42021272305 ).
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- 2024
3. Endoscopic therapies for patients with obesity: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Weitzner, Zachary, Phan, Jennifer, Begashaw, Meron, Mak, Selene, Booth, Marika, Shekelle, Paul, Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, and Girgis, Mark
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AspireAssist ,Bariatric endoscopy ,Endoscopic sleeve gastrectomy ,Intragastric balloon ,Humans ,Quality of Life ,Treatment Outcome ,Obesity ,Endoscopy ,Gastroplasty ,Weight Loss ,Obesity ,Morbid - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obesity is a major threat to public health and traditional bariatric surgery continues to have low utilization. Endoscopic treatments for obesity have emerged that offer less risk, but questions remain regarding efficacy, durability, and safety. We compared the efficacy of endoscopic bariatric procedures as compared to other existing treatments. METHODS: A literature search of Embase, Cochrane Central, and Pubmed was conducted from January 1, 2014 to December 7, 2021, including endoscopic bariatric therapies that were FDA or CE approved at the time of search to non-endoscopic treatments. Thirty-seven studies involving 15,639 patients were included. Primary outcomes included % total body weight loss (%TBWL), % excess body weight loss (%EBWL), and adverse events. Secondary outcomes included quality of life data and differences in hemoglobin A1C levels. Strength of clinical trial and observational data were graded according to the Cochrane methods. RESULTS: Intragastric balloons achieved greater %TBWL with a range of 7.6-14.1% compared to 3.3-6.7% with lifestyle modification at 6 months, and 7.5-14.0% compared to 3.1-7.9%, respectively, at 12 months. When endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty (ESG) was compared to laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG), ESG had less %TBWL at 4.7-14.4% compared to 18.8-26.5% after LSG at 6 months, and 4.5-18.6% as compared to 28.4-29.3%, respectively, at 12 months. For the AspireAssist, there was greater %TBWL with aspiration therapy compared to lifestyle modification at 12 months, 12.1-18.3% TBWL versus 3.5-5.9% TBWL, respectively. All endoscopic interventions had higher adverse events rates compared to lifestyle modification. CONCLUSION: This review is the first to evaluate various endoscopic bariatric therapies using only RCTs and observational studies for evaluation of weight loss compared with conservative management, lifestyle modification, and bariatric surgery. Endoscopic therapies result in greater weight loss compared to lifestyle modification, but not as much as bariatric surgery. Endoscopic therapies may be beneficial as an alternative to bariatric surgery.
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- 2023
4. Dual antiplatelet management in the perioperative period: updated and expanded systematic review.
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Blegen, Mariah, Corley, Alyssa, Ulloa, Jesus, Booth, Marika, Begashaw, Meron, Larkin, Jody, Shekelle, Paul, Girgis, Mark, Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, and Premji, Alykhan
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DAPT ,Perioperative Management ,Surgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antiplatelet agents are central in the management of vascular disease. The use of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) for the management of thromboembolic complications must be weighed against bleeding risk in the perioperative setting. This balance is critical in patients undergoing cardiac or non-cardiac surgery. The management of patients on DAPT for any indication (including stents) is not clear and there is limited evidence to guide decision-making. This review summarizes current evidence since 2015 regarding the occurrence of major adverse events associated with continuing, suspending, or varying DAPT in the perioperative period. METHODS: A research librarian searched PubMed and Cochrane from November 30, 2015 to May 17, 2022, for relevant terms regarding adult patients on DAPT for any reason undergoing surgery, with a perioperative variation in DAPT strategy. Outcomes of interest included the occurrence of major adverse cardiac events, major adverse limb events, all-cause death, major bleeding, and reoperation. We considered withdrawal or discontinuation of DAPT as stopping either aspirin or a P2Y12 inhibitor or both agents; continuation of DAPT indicates that both drugs were given in the specified timeframe. RESULTS: Eighteen observational studies met the inclusion criteria. No RCTs were identified, and no studies were judged to be at low risk of bias. Twelve studies reported on CABG. Withholding DAPT therapy for more than 2 days was associated with less blood loss and a slight trend favoring less transfusion and surgical re-exploration. Among five observational CABG studies, there were no statistically significant differences in patient death across DAPT management strategies. Few studies reported cardiac outcomes. The remaining studies, which were about procedures other than exclusively CABG, demonstrated mixed findings with respect to DAPT strategy, bleeding, and ischemic outcomes. CONCLUSION: The evidence base on the benefits and risks of different perioperative DAPT strategies for patients with stents is extremely limited. The strongest signal, which was still judged as low certainty evidence, is that suspension of DAPT for greater than 2 days prior to CABG surgery is associated with less bleeding, transfusions, and re-explorations. Different DAPT strategies association with other outcomes of interest, such as MACE, remains uncertain. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION: A preregistered protocol for this review can be found on the PROSPERO International Prospective Register of systematic reviews ( http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/ ; registration number: CRD42022371032).
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- 2023
5. Comparing Quality of Surgical Care Between the US Department of Veterans Affairs and Non-Veterans Affairs Settings: A Systematic Review.
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Blegen, Mariah, Ko, Jamie, Salzman, Garrett, Begashaw, Meron M, Ulloa, Jesus G, Girgis, Mark, Shekelle, Paul, and Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda
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Humans ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Hospitals ,Veterans ,Health Services Accessibility ,United States ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Health Services ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Surgery - Abstract
In response to concerns about healthcare access and long wait times within the Veterans Health Administration (VA), Congress passed the Choice Act of 2014 and the Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks (MISSION) Act of 2018 to create a program for patients to receive care in non-VA sites of care, paid by VA. Questions remain about the quality of surgical care between these sites in specific and between VA and non-VA care in general. This review synthesizes recent evidence comparing surgical care between VA and non-VA delivered care across the domains of quality and safety, access, patient experience, and comparative cost/efficiency (2015 to 2021). Eighteen studies met the inclusion criteria. Of 13 studies reporting quality and safety outcomes, 11 reported that quality and safety of VA surgical care were as good as or better than non-VA sites of care. Six studies of access did not have a preponderance of evidence favoring care in either setting. One study of patient experience reported VA care as about equal to non-VA care. All 4 studies of cost/efficiency outcomes favored non-VA care. Based on limited data, these findings suggest that expanding eligibility for veterans to get care in the community may not provide benefits in terms of increasing access to surgical procedures, will not result in better quality, and may result in worse quality of care, but may reduce inpatient length of stay and perhaps cost less.
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- 2023
6. A Framework for Synthesizing Intervention Evidence from Multiple Sources into a Single Certainty of Evidence Rating: Methodological Developments from a US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Committee
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Calonge, N, Shekelle, Paul G., Owens, Douglas K., Teutsch, Steven, Downey, Autumn, Brown, Lisa, and Noyes, Jane
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Despite research investment and a growing body of diverse evidence there has been no comprehensive review and grading of evidence for public health emergency preparedness and response practices comparable to those in medicine and other public health fields. The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine convened an ad hoc committee to develop and use methods for grading and synthesizing diverse types of evidence to create a single certainty of intervention-related evidence to support recommendations for Public Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Research. A 13-step consensus building method was used. Experts were first canvassed in public meetings, and a comprehensive review of existing methods was undertaken. Although aspects of existing review methodologies and evidence grading systems were relevant, none adequately covered all requirements for this specific context. Starting with a desire to synthesize diverse sources of evidence not usually included in systematic reviews and using GRADE for assessing certainty and confidence in quantitative and qualitative evidence as the foundation, we developed a mixed-methods synthesis review and grading methodology that drew on (and in some cases adapted) those elements of existing frameworks and methods that were most applicable. Four topics were selected as test cases. The process was operationalized with a suite of method-specific reviews of diverse evidence types for each topic. Further consensus building was undertaken through stakeholder engagement and feedback The NASEM committee's GRADE adaption for mixed-methods reviews will further evolve over time and has yet to be endorsed by the GRADE working group.
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- 2023
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7. Prevention in Adults of Transmission of Infection With Multidrug-Resistant Organisms. Rapid Review
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McCarthy, Sean T., primary, Motala, Aneesa, additional, Lawson, Emily, additional, and Shekelle, Paul G., additional
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- 2024
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8. Burnout, employee engagement, and changing organizational contexts in VA primary care during the early COVID-19 pandemic
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Apaydin, Eric A., Rose, Danielle E., McClean, Michael R., Mohr, David C., Yano, Elizabeth M., Shekelle, Paul G., Nelson, Karin M., Guo, Rong, Yoo, Caroline K., and Stockdale, Susan E.
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- 2023
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9. Dual antiplatelet management in the perioperative period: updated and expanded systematic review
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Premji, Alykhan M., Blegen, Mariah B., Corley, Alyssa M., Ulloa, Jesus, Booth, Marika S., Begashaw, Meron, Larkin, Jody, Shekelle, Paul, Girgis, Mark D., and Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda
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- 2023
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10. Economic evaluation of quality improvement interventions to prevent catheter-associated urinary tract infections in the hospital setting: a systematic review.
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McCleskey, Sara, Shek, Lili, Grein, Jonathan, Gotanda, Hiroshi, Anderson, Laura, Shekelle, Paul, Keeler, Emmett, Morton, Sally, and Nuckols, Teryl
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cost-effectiveness ,nosocomial infections ,quality improvement ,Catheters ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Female ,Hospitals ,Humans ,Male ,Quality Improvement ,Urinary Tract Infections - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospitals have implemented diverse quality improvement (QI) interventions to reduce rates of catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs). The economic value of these QI interventions is uncertain. OBJECTIVE: To systematically review economic evaluations of QI interventions designed to prevent CAUTI in acute care hospitals. METHODS: A search of Ovid MEDLINE, Econlit, Centre for Reviews & Dissemination, New York Academy of Medicines Grey Literature Report, WorldCat, IDWeek conference abstracts and prior systematic reviews was conducted from January 2000 to October 2020.We included English-language studies of any design that evaluated organisational or structural changes to prevent CAUTI in acute care hospitals, and reported programme and infection-related costs.Dual reviewers assessed study design, effectiveness, costs and study quality. For each eligible study, we performed a cost-consequences analysis from the hospital perspective, estimating the incidence rate ratio (IRR) and incremental net cost/savings per hospital over 3 years. Unadjusted weighted regression analyses tested predictors of these measures, weighted by catheter days per study. RESULTS: Fifteen unique economic evaluations were eligible, encompassing 74 hospitals. Across 12 studies amenable to standardisation, QI interventions were associated with a 43% decline in infections (mean IRR 0.57, 95% CI 0.44 to 0.70) and wide ranges of net costs (mean US$52 000, 95% CI -$288 000 to $392 000), relative to usual care. CONCLUSIONS: QI interventions were associated with large declines in infection rates and net costs to hospitals that varied greatly but that, on average, were not significantly different from zero over 3 years. Future research should examine specific practices associated with cost-savings and clinical effectiveness, and examine whether or not more comprehensive interventions offer hospitals and patients the best value.
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- 2022
11. Veterans Health Administration (VA) vs. Non-VA Healthcare Quality: A Systematic Review
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Apaydin, Eric A., Paige, Neil M., Begashaw, Meron M., Larkin, Jody, Miake-Lye, Isomi M., and Shekelle, Paul G.
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- 2023
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12. How physicians evaluate patients with dementia who present with shortness of breath
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Ly, Dan P and Shekelle, Paul G
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Hematology ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Prevention ,Neurodegenerative ,Patient Safety ,Cardiovascular ,Rare Diseases ,Dementia ,Lung ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,7.3 Management and decision making ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Neurological ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Dyspnea ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Hospitals ,Veterans ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Practice Patterns ,Physicians' ,Pulmonary Embolism ,dementia ,physician behavior ,physician decision-making ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
BackgroundWhether the presence of dementia in patients makes it difficult for physicians to assess the risk such patients might have for serious conditions such as pulmonary embolism (PE) is unknown. Our objective was to examine the differential association of four clinical factors (deep venous thrombosis (DVT)/PE, malignancy, recent surgery, and tachycardia) with PE testing for patients with dementia compared to patients without dementia.MethodsWe performed a cross-sectional study of emergency department (ED) visits to 104 Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals from 2011 to 2018 by patients aged 60 years and over presenting with shortness of breath (SOB). Our outcomes were PE testing (CT scan and/or D-dimer) and subsequently diagnosed acute PE.ResultsThe sample included 593,001 patient visits for SOB across 7124 ED physicians; 5.6% of the sample had dementia, and 10.6% received PE testing. Three of the four clinical factors examined had a lower association with PE testing for patients with dementia. For example, after taking into account that at baseline, physicians were 0.9 percentage points less likely to test patients with dementia than patients without dementia for PE, physicians were an additional 2.6 percentage points less likely to test patients with dementia who had tachycardia than patients without dementia who had tachycardia. We failed to find evidence that any clinical factor examined had a differentially lower association with a subsequently diagnosed acute PE for patients with dementia.ConclusionsClinical factors known to be predictive of PE risk had a lower association with PE testing for patients with dementia compared to patients without dementia. These results may be consistent with physicians missing these clinical factors more often when evaluating patients with dementia, but also with physicians recognizing such factors but not using them in the decision-making process. Further understanding how physicians evaluate patients with dementia presenting with common acute symptoms may help improve the care delivered to such patients.
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- 2022
13. Clinical outcomes and cost of robotic ventral hernia repair: systematic review
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Ye, Linda, Childers, Christopher P, de Virgilio, Michael, Shenoy, Rivfka, Mederos, Michael A, Mak, Selene S, Begashaw, Meron M, Booth, Marika S, Shekelle, Paul G, Wilson, Mark, Gunnar, William, Girgis, Mark D, and Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda
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Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Digestive Diseases ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.4 Surgery ,Hernia ,Ventral ,Herniorrhaphy ,Humans ,Incisional Hernia ,Robotic Surgical Procedures ,Robotics - Abstract
Robotic ventral hernia repair (VHR) has seen rapid adoption, but with limited data assessing clinical outcome or cost. This systematic review compared robotic VHR with laparoscopic and open approaches. This systematic review was undertaken in accordance with PRISMA guidelines. PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane databases were searched for articles with terms relating to 'robot-assisted', 'cost effectiveness', and 'ventral hernia' or 'incisional hernia' from 1 January 2010 to 10 November 2020. Intraoperative and postoperative outcomes, pain, recurrence, and cost data were extracted for narrative analysis. Of 25 studies that met the inclusion criteria, three were RCTs and 22 observational studies. Robotic VHR was associated with a longer duration of operation than open and laparoscopic repairs, but with fewer transfusions, shorter hospital stay, and lower complication rates than open repair. Robotic VHR was more expensive than laparoscopic repair, but not significantly different from open surgery in terms of cost. There were no significant differences in rates of intraoperative complication, conversion to open surgery, surgical-site infection, readmission, mortality, pain, or recurrence between the three approaches. Robotic VHR was associated with a longer duration of operation, fewer transfusions, a shorter hospital stay, and fewer complications compared with open surgery. Robotic VHR had higher costs and a longer operating time than laparoscopic repair. Randomized or matched data with standardized reporting, long-term outcomes, and cost-effectiveness analyses are still required to weigh the clinical benefits against the cost of robotic VHR.
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- 2021
14. Deprescribing To Reduce Medication Harms in Older Adults
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Linsky, Amy M., primary, Motala, Aneesa, additional, Lawson, Emily, additional, and Shekelle, Paul, additional
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- 2024
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15. Developing clinical practice guidelines: target audiences, identifying topics for guidelines, guideline group composition and functioning and conflicts of interest
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Eccles Martin P, Grimshaw Jeremy M, Shekelle Paul, Schünemann Holger J, and Woolf Steven
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Clinical practice guidelines are one of the foundations of efforts to improve health care. In 1999, we authored a paper about methods to develop guidelines. Since it was published, the methods of guideline development have progressed both in terms of methods and necessary procedures and the context for guideline development has changed with the emergence of guideline clearing houses and large scale guideline production organisations (such as the UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence). It therefore seems timely to, in a series of three articles, update and extend our earlier paper. In this first paper we discuss: the target audience(s) for guidelines and their use of guidelines; identifying topics for guidelines; guideline group composition (including consumer involvement) and the processes by which guideline groups function and the important procedural issue of managing conflicts of interest in guideline development.
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- 2012
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16. Developing clinical practice guidelines: reviewing, reporting, and publishing guidelines; updating guidelines; and the emerging issues of enhancing guideline implementability and accounting for comorbid conditions in guideline development
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Shekelle Paul, Woolf Steven, Grimshaw Jeremy M, Schünemann Holger J, and Eccles Martin P
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Clinical practice guidelines are one of the foundations of efforts to improve health care. In 1999, we authored a paper about methods to develop guidelines. Since it was published, the methods of guideline development have progressed both in terms of methods and necessary procedures and the context for guideline development has changed with the emergence of guideline clearing houses and large scale guideline production organisations (such as the UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence). It therefore seems timely to, in a series of three articles, update and extend our earlier paper. In this third paper we discuss the issues of: reviewing, reporting, and publishing guidelines; updating guidelines; and the two emerging issues of enhancing guideline implementability and how guideline developers should approach dealing with the issue of patients who will be the subject of guidelines having co-morbid conditions.
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- 2012
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17. Developing clinical practice guidelines: types of evidence and outcomes; values and economics, synthesis, grading, and presentation and deriving recommendations
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Woolf Steven, Schünemann Holger J, Eccles Martin P, Grimshaw Jeremy M, and Shekelle Paul
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Clinical practice guidelines are one of the foundations of efforts to improve healthcare. In 1999, we authored a paper about methods to develop guidelines. Since it was published, the methods of guideline development have progressed both in terms of methods and necessary procedures and the context for guideline development has changed with the emergence of guideline clearinghouses and large scale guideline production organisations (such as the UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence). It therefore seems timely to, in a series of three articles, update and extend our earlier paper. In this second paper, we discuss issues of identifying and synthesizing evidence: deciding what type of evidence and outcomes to include in guidelines; integrating values into a guideline; incorporating economic considerations; synthesis, grading, and presentation of evidence; and moving from evidence to recommendations.
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- 2012
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18. Establishing a new journal for systematic review products
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Moher David, Stewart Lesley, and Shekelle Paul
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new journal ,systematic reviews ,open access ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Welcome to a new age in publishing systematic reviews. We hope the launch of Systematic Reviews will resonate with a broad spectrum of readers interested in using them in a variety of ways, such as providing comprehensive and up to date evidence for patient management, informing health policy, and developing rigorous practice guidelines. Systematic reviews are increasingly popular. Our journal is committed to publishing a wide variety of well conducted and transparently reported systematic reviews and associated research. We are open access and electronic and not confined by space and so offer scope for publishing reviews in detail and providing a modern and innovative approach to publishing. We look forward to participating in the voyage with all of our readers.
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- 2012
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19. Why prospective registration of systematic reviews makes sense
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Stewart Lesley, Moher David, and Shekelle Paul
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Prospective registration of systematic reviews promotes transparency, helps reduce potential for bias and serves to avoid unintended duplication of reviews. Registration offers advantages to many stakeholders in return for modest additional effort from the researchers registering their reviews.
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- 2012
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20. Conducting Online Expert panels: a feasibility and experimental replicability study
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Khodyakov Dmitry, Hempel Susanne, Rubenstein Lisa, Shekelle Paul, Foy Robbie, Salem-Schatz Susanne, O'Neill Sean, Danz Margie, and Dalal Siddhartha
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background This paper has two goals. First, we explore the feasibility of conducting online expert panels to facilitate consensus finding among a large number of geographically distributed stakeholders. Second, we test the replicability of panel findings across four panels of different size. Method We engaged 119 panelists in an iterative process to identify definitional features of Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI). We conducted four parallel online panels of different size through three one-week phases by using the RAND's ExpertLens process. In Phase I, participants rated potentially definitional CQI features. In Phase II, they discussed rating results online, using asynchronous, anonymous discussion boards. In Phase III, panelists re-rated Phase I features and reported on their experiences as participants. Results 66% of invited experts participated in all three phases. 62% of Phase I participants contributed to Phase II discussions and 87% of them completed Phase III. Panel disagreement, measured by the mean absolute deviation from the median (MAD-M), decreased after group feedback and discussion in 36 out of 43 judgments about CQI features. Agreement between the four panels after Phase III was fair (four-way kappa = 0.36); they agreed on the status of five out of eleven CQI features. Results of the post-completion survey suggest that participants were generally satisfied with the online process. Compared to participants in smaller panels, those in larger panels were more likely to agree that they had debated each others' view points. Conclusion It is feasible to conduct online expert panels intended to facilitate consensus finding among geographically distributed participants. The online approach may be practical for engaging large and diverse groups of stakeholders around a range of health services research topics and can help conduct multiple parallel panels to test for the reproducibility of panel conclusions.
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- 2011
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21. Identifying quality improvement intervention publications - A comparison of electronic search strategies
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Rubenstein Lisa V, Hempel Susanne, Shanman Roberta M, Foy Robbie, Golder Su, Danz Marjorie, and Shekelle Paul G
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background The evidence base for quality improvement (QI) interventions is expanding rapidly. The diversity of the initiatives and the inconsistency in labeling these as QI interventions makes it challenging for researchers, policymakers, and QI practitioners to access the literature systematically and to identify relevant publications. Methods We evaluated search strategies developed for MEDLINE (Ovid) and PubMed based on free text words, Medical subject headings (MeSH), QI intervention components, continuous quality improvement (CQI) methods, and combinations of the strategies. Three sets of pertinent QI intervention publications were used for validation. Two independent expert reviewers screened publications for relevance. We compared the yield, recall rate, and precision of the search strategies for the identification of QI publications and for a subset of empirical studies on effects of QI interventions. Results The search yields ranged from 2,221 to 216,167 publications. Mean recall rates for reference publications ranged from 5% to 53% for strategies with yields of 50,000 publications or fewer. The 'best case' strategy, a simple text word search with high face validity ('quality' AND 'improv*' AND 'intervention*') identified 44%, 24%, and 62% of influential intervention articles selected by Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) experts, a set of exemplar articles provided by members of the Standards for Quality Improvement Reporting Excellence (SQUIRE) group, and a sample from the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organization of Care Group (EPOC) register of studies, respectively. We applied the search strategy to a PubMed search for articles published in 10 pertinent journals in a three-year period which retrieved 183 publications. Among these, 67% were deemed relevant to QI by at least one of two independent raters. Forty percent were classified as empirical studies reporting on a QI intervention. Conclusions The presented search terms and operating characteristics can be used to guide the identification of QI intervention publications. Even with extensive iterative development, we achieved only moderate recall rates of reference publications. Consensus development on QI reporting and initiatives to develop QI-relevant MeSH terms are urgently needed.
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- 2011
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22. Formative evaluation of the telecare fall prevention project for older veterans
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Saliba Debra, Amulis Angel, Miake-Lye Isomi M, Shekelle Paul G, Volkman Linda K, and Ganz David A
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Fall prevention interventions for community-dwelling older adults have been found to reduce falls in some research studies. However, wider implementation of fall prevention activities in routine care has yielded mixed results. We implemented a theory-driven program to improve care for falls at our Veterans Affairs healthcare facility. The first project arising from this program used a nurse advice telephone line to identify patients' risk factors for falls and to triage patients to appropriate services. Here we report the formative evaluation of this project. Methods To evaluate the intervention we: 1) interviewed patient and employee stakeholders, 2) reviewed participating patients' electronic health record data and 3) abstracted information from meeting minutes. We describe the implementation process, including whether the project was implemented according to plan; identify barriers and facilitators to implementation; and assess the incremental benefit to the quality of health care for fall prevention received by patients in the project. We also estimate the cost of developing the pilot project. Results The project underwent multiple changes over its life span, including the addition of an option to mail patients educational materials about falls. During the project's lifespan, 113 patients were considered for inclusion and 35 participated. Patient and employee interviews suggested support for the project, but revealed that transportation to medical care was a major barrier in following up on fall risks identified by nurse telephone triage. Medical record review showed that the project enhanced usual medical care with respect to home safety counseling. We discontinued the program after 18 months due to staffing limitations and competing priorities. We estimated a cost of $9194 for meeting time to develop the project. Conclusions The project appeared feasible at its outset but could not be sustained past the first cycle of evaluation due to insufficient resources and a waning of local leadership support due to competing national priorities. Future projects will need both front-level staff commitment and prolonged high-level leadership involvement to thrive.
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- 2011
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23. Intraoperative and postoperative outcomes of robot-assisted cholecystectomy: a systematic review.
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Shenoy, Rivfka, Mederos, Michael A, Ye, Linda, Mak, Selene S, Begashaw, Meron M, Booth, Marika S, Shekelle, Paul G, Wilson, Mark, Gunnar, William, Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, and Girgis, Mark D
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Humans ,Gallbladder Diseases ,Laparoscopy ,Length of Stay ,Cholecystectomy ,Cholecystectomy ,Laparoscopic ,Robotics ,Gallbladder ,Laparoscopic ,Review ,Robot-assisted ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Bioengineering ,6.4 Surgery ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundRapid adoption of robotic-assisted general surgery procedures, particularly for cholecystectomy, continues while questions remain about its benefits and utility. The objective of this study was to compare the clinical effectiveness of robot-assisted cholecystectomy for benign gallbladder disease as compared with the laparoscopic approach.MethodsA literature search was performed from January 2010 to March 2020, and a narrative analysis was performed as studies were heterogeneous.ResultsOf 887 articles screened, 44 met the inclusion criteria (range 20-735,537 patients). Four were randomized controlled trials, and four used propensity-matching. There were variable comparisons between operative techniques with only 19 out of 44 studies comparing techniques using the same number of ports. Operating room time was longer for the robot-assisted technique in the majority of studies (range 11-55 min for 22 studies, p < 0.05; 15 studies showed no difference; two studies showed shorter laparoscopic times), while conversion rates and intraoperative complications were not different. No differences were detected for the length of stay, surgical site infection, or readmissions. Across studies comparing single-port robot-assisted to multi-port laparoscopic cholecystectomy, there was a higher rate of incisional hernia; however, no differences were noted when comparing single-port robot-assisted to single-port laparoscopic cholecystectomy.ConclusionsClinical outcomes were similar for benign, elective gallbladder disease for robot-assisted compared with laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Overall, the rates of complications were low. More high-quality studies are needed as the robot-assisted technique expands to more complex gallbladder disease, where its utility may prove increasingly beneficial.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42020156945.
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- 2021
24. Design of a continuous quality improvement program to prevent falls among community-dwelling older adults in an integrated healthcare system
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Yano Elizabeth M, Ganz David A, Saliba Debra, and Shekelle Paul G
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Implementing quality improvement programs that require behavior change on the part of health care professionals and patients has proven difficult in routine care. Significant randomized trial evidence supports creating fall prevention programs for community-dwelling older adults, but adoption in routine care has been limited. Nationally-collected data indicated that our local facility could improve its performance on fall prevention in community-dwelling older people. We sought to develop a sustainable local fall prevention program, using theory to guide program development. Methods We planned program development to include important stakeholders within our organization. The theory-derived plan consisted of 1) an initial leadership meeting to agree on whether creating a fall prevention program was a priority for the organization, 2) focus groups with patients and health care professionals to develop ideas for the program, 3) monthly workgroup meetings with representatives from key departments to develop a blueprint for the program, 4) a second leadership meeting to confirm that the blueprint developed by the workgroup was satisfactory, and also to solicit feedback on ideas for program refinement. Results The leadership and workgroup meetings occurred as planned and led to the development of a functional program. The focus groups did not occur as planned, mainly due to the complexity of obtaining research approval for focus groups. The fall prevention program uses an existing telephonic nurse advice line to 1) place outgoing calls to patients at high fall risk, 2) assess these patients' risk factors for falls, and 3) triage these patients to the appropriate services. The workgroup continues to meet monthly to monitor the progress of the program and improve it. Conclusion A theory-driven program development process has resulted in the successful initial implementation of a fall prevention program.
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- 2009
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25. Drug therapies for chronic conditions and risk of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias: A scoping review
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Thunell, Johanna, Chen, Yi, Joyce, Geoffrey, Barthold, Douglas, Shekelle, Paul G, Brinton, Roberta Diaz, and Zissimopoulos, Julie
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Aging ,Cardiovascular ,Neurosciences ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Dementia ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Brain Disorders ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Neurodegenerative ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Alzheimer Disease ,Chronic Disease ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Humans ,Alzheimer's disease ,dementia ,drug therapies ,Clinical Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
IntroductionMost older Americans use drug therapies for chronic conditions. Several are associated with risk of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD).MethodsA scoping review was used to identify drug classes associated with increasing or decreasing ADRD risk. We analyzed size, type, and findings of the evidence.ResultsWe identified 29 drug classes across 11 therapeutic areas, and 404 human studies. Most common were studies on drugs for hypertension (93) or hyperlipidemia (81). Fewer than five studies were identified for several anti-diabetic and anti-inflammatory drugs. Evidence was observational only for beta blockers, proton pump inhibitors, benzodiazepines, and disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs. For 13 drug classes, 50% or more of the studies reported consistent direction of effect on risk of ADRD.DiscussionFuture research targeting drug classes with limited/non-robust evidence, examining sex, racial heterogeneity, and separating classes by molecule, will facilitate understanding of associated risk, and inform clinical and policy efforts to alleviate the growing impact of ADRD.
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- 2021
26. Do proxies reflect patients' health concerns about urinary incontinence and gait problems?
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Solomon David H, Shekelle Paul G, Reuben David B, Pham Chau, Kamberg Caren J, Brown Julie A, Hays Ron D, Higashi Takahiro, Young Roy T, Roth Carol P, Chang John T, MacLean Catherine H, and Wenger Neil S
- Subjects
Fear of falling ,Urinary incontinence ,Health-related quality of life ,Patient-proxy agreement ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background While falls and urinary incontinence are prevalent among older patients, who sometimes rely on proxies to provide their health information, the validity of proxy reports of concern about falls and urinary incontinence remains unknown. Methods Telephone interviews with 43 consecutive patients with falls or fear of falling and/or bothersome urinary incontinence and their proxies chosen by patients as most knowledgeable about their health. The questionnaire included items derived from the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 12 (SF-12), a scale assessing concerns about urinary incontinence (UI), and a measure of fear of falling, the Falls Efficacy Scale (FES). Scores were estimated using items asking the proxy perspective (6 items from the SF-12, 10 items from a UI scale, and all 10 FES items). Proxy and patient scores were compared using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC, one-way model). Variables associated with absolute agreement between patients and proxies were explored. Results Patients had a mean age of 81 years (range 75–93) and 67% were female while proxies had a mean age of 70 (range 42–87) and 49% were female. ICCs were 0.63 for the SF-12, 0.52 for the UI scale, and 0.29 for the FES. Proxies tended to understate patients' general health and incontinence concern, but overstate patients' concern about falling. Proxies who lived with patients and those who more often see patients more closely reflected patient FES scores compared to those who lived apart or those who saw patients less often. Internal consistency reliability of proxy responses was 0.62 for the SF-12, 0.86 for the I-QOL, and 0.93 for the FES. In addition, construct validity of the proxy FES scale was supported by greater proxy-perceived fear of falling for patients who received medical care after a fall during the past 12 months (p < .05). Conclusion Caution should be exercised when using proxies as a source of information about older patients' health perceptions. Questions asking about proxies' views yield suboptimal agreement with patient responses. However, proxy scales of UI and fall concern are internally consistent and may provide valid independent information.
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- 2005
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27. Making Healthcare Safer IV: Use of Report Cards and Outcome Measurements To Improve the Safety of Surgical Care
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Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, primary, Blegen, Mariah, additional, Tupper, Haley, additional, Girgis, Mark, additional, Premji, Alykhan, additional, Huy, Tess, additional, Motala, Aneesa, additional, Lawson, Emily, additional, and Shekelle, Paul, additional
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- 2023
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28. How are medical groups identified as high-performing? The effect of different approaches to classification of performance
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Ahluwalia, Sangeeta C, Damberg, Cheryl L, Haas, Ann, and Shekelle, Paul G
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Generic health relevance ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Employee Performance Appraisal ,Group Practice ,Health Services Research ,Humans ,Minnesota ,Quality of Health Care ,Performance measurement ,Quality ,Health system ,Library and Information Studies ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundPayers and policy makers across the international healthcare market are increasingly using publicly available summary measures to designate providers as "high-performing", but no consistently-applied approach exists to identifying high performers. This paper uses publicly available data to examine how different classification approaches influence which providers are designated as "high-performers".MethodsWe conducted a quantitative analysis of cross-sectional publicly-available performance data in the U.S. We used 2014 Minnesota Community Measurement data from 58 medical groups to classify performance across 4 domains: quality (two process measures of cancer screening and 2 composite measures of chronic disease management), total cost of care, access (a composite CAHPS measure), and patient experience (3 CAHPS measures). We classified medical groups based on performance using either relative thresholds or absolute values of performance on all included measures.ResultsUsing relative thresholds, none of the 58 medical groups achieved performance in the top 25% or 35% in all 4 performance domains. A relative threshold of 40% was needed before one group was classified as high-performing in all 4 domains. Using absolute threshold values, two medical groups were classified as high-performing across all 4 domains. In both approaches, designating "high performance" using fewer domains led to more groups designated as high-performers, though there was little to moderate concordance across identified "high-performing" groups.ConclusionsClassification of medical groups as high performing is sensitive to the domains of performance included, the classification approach, and choice of threshold. With increasing focus on achieving high performance in healthcare delivery, the absence of a consistently-applied approach to identify high performers impedes efforts to reliably compare, select and reward high-performing providers.
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- 2019
29. Use of complementary/alternative therapies by women with advanced-stage breast cancer
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Glaspy John, Wenger Neil, Albert Paul S, Andersen Ronald, Shen Joannie, Cole Melissa, and Shekelle Paul
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Other systems of medicine ,RZ201-999 - Abstract
Abstract Background This study sought to describe the pattern of complementary/alternative medicine (CAM) use among a group of patients with advanced breast cancer, to examine the main reasons for their CAM use, to identify patient's information sources and their communication pattern with their physicians. Methods Face-to-face structured interviews of patients with advanced-stage breast cancer at a comprehensive oncology center. Results Seventy three percent of patients used CAM; relaxation/meditative techniques and herbal medicine were the most common. The most commonly cited primary reason for CAM use was to boost the immune system, the second, to treat cancer; however these reasons varied depending on specific CAM therapy. Friends or family members and mass media were common primary information source's about CAM. Conclusions A high proportion of advanced-stage breast cancer patients used CAM. Discussion with doctors was high for ingested products. Mass media was a prominent source of patient information. Credible sources of CAM information for patients and physicians are needed.
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- 2002
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30. Improving grading of recommendations assessment, development, and evaluation evidence tables part 4: a three-arm noninferiority randomized trial demonstrates improved understanding of content in summary of findings tables with a new format
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Morgan, Rebecca L., Yepes-Nuñez, Juan José, Ewusie, Joycelyne, Mbuagbaw, Lawrence, Chang, Stephanie, Baldeh, Tejan, Hempel, Susanne, Helfand, Mark, Shekelle, Paul, Wilt, Timothy J., and Schünemann, Holger J.
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- 2023
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31. Massage for Pain: An Evidence Map
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Miake-Lye, Isomi M, Mak, Selene, Lee, Jason, Luger, Tana, Taylor, Stephanie L, Shanman, Roberta, Beroes-Severin, Jessica M, and Shekelle, Paul G
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Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Health Sciences ,Cancer ,Complementary and Integrative Health ,Pain Research ,Mind and Body ,Chronic Pain ,Musculoskeletal ,Humans ,Massage ,Pain Management ,Systematic Reviews as Topic ,massage ,pain ,evidence map ,Complementary and Alternative Medicine ,Complementary & Alternative Medicine ,Traditional ,complementary and integrative medicine - Abstract
Objectives: Massage therapy has been proposed for painful conditions, but it can be difficult to understand the breadth and depth of evidence, as various painful conditions may respond differently to massage. The authors conducted an evidence mapping process and generated an "evidence map" to visually depict the distribution of evidence available for massage and various pain indications to identify gaps in evidence and to inform future research priorities. Design: The authors searched PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane for systematic reviews reporting pain outcomes for massage therapy. The authors assessed the quality of each review using the Assessing the Methodological Quality of Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR) criteria. The authors used a bubble plot to depict the number of included articles, pain indication, effect of massage for pain, and strength of findings for each included systematic review. Results: The authors identified 49 systematic reviews, of which 32 were considered high quality. Types of pain frequently included in systematic reviews were cancer pain, low back pain, and neck pain. High quality reviews concluded that there was low strength of evidence of potential benefits of massage for labor, shoulder, neck, low back, cancer, arthritis, postoperative, delayed onset muscle soreness, and musculoskeletal pain. Reported attributes of massage interventions include style of massage, provider, co-interventions, duration, and comparators, with 14 high-quality reviews reporting all these attributes in their review. Conclusion: Prior reviews have conclusions of low strength of evidence because few primary studies of large samples with rigorous methods had been conducted, leaving evidence gaps about specific massage type for specific pain. Primary studies often do not provide adequate details of massage therapy provided, limiting the extent to which reviews are able to draw conclusions about characteristics such as provider type.
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- 2019
32. Final Report on Prioritization of Patient Safety Practices for a New Rapid Review or Rapid Response
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Rosen, Michael, primary, Dy, Sydney M., additional, Stewart, C. Matthew, additional, Shekelle, Paul, additional, Tsou, Amy, additional, Treadwell, Jonathan, additional, Sharma, Ritu, additional, Zhang, Allen, additional, Vass, Montrell, additional, Motala, Aneesa, additional, and Bass, Eric B., additional
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- 2023
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33. Perioperative management of antiplatelet therapy in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery following coronary stent placement: a systematic review
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Childers, Christopher P, Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, Ulloa, Jesus G, MacQueen, Ian T, Miake-Lye, Isomi M, Shanman, Roberta, Mak, Selene, Beroes, Jessica M, and Shekelle, Paul G
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Patient Safety ,Cardiovascular ,Bioengineering ,Assistive Technology ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.4 Surgery ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Hemorrhage ,Humans ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,Postoperative Complications ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Stents ,Time Factors ,Antiplatelet therapy ,Perioperative care ,Anticoagulation ,Cardiology ,Surgery ,Bleeding ,Major adverse cardiac events ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BACKGROUND:The correct perioperative management of antiplatelet therapy (APT) in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery (NCS) is often debated by clinicians. American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines recommend postponing elective NCS at least 3 months after stent implantation. Regardless of the timing of surgery, ACC/AHA guidelines recommend continuing at least ASA throughout the perioperative period and ideally continuing dual APT (DAPT) therapy "unless surgery demands discontinuation." The objective of this review was to ascertain the risks and benefits of APT in the perioperative period, to assess how these risks and benefits vary by APT management, and the significance of length of time since stent implantation before operative intervention. METHODS:PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus were searched from inception through October 2017. Articles were included if patients were post PCI with stent placement (bare metal [BMS] or drug eluting [DES]), underwent elective NCS, and had rates of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) or bleeding events associated with pre and perioperative APT therapy. RESULTS:Of 4882 screened articles, we included 16 studies in the review (1 randomized controlled trial and 15 observational studies). Studies were small (150: n = 6). All studies included DES with 7 of 16 also including BMS. Average time from stent to NCS was variable ( 12 months: n = 6). At least six different APT strategies were described. Six studies further utilized bridging protocols using three different pharmacologic agents. Studies typically included multiple surgical fields with varying degrees of invasiveness. Across all APT strategies, rates of MACE/bleeding ranged from 0 to 21% and 0 to 22%. There was no visible trend in MACE/bleeding rates within a given APT strategy. Stratifying the articles by type of surgery, timing of discontinuation of APT therapy, bridging vs. no bridging, and time since stent placement did not help explain the heterogeneity. CONCLUSIONS:Evidence regarding perioperative APT management in patients with cardiac stents undergoing NCS is insufficient to guide practice. Other clinical factors may have a greater impact than perioperative APT management on MACE and bleeding events. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION:PROSPERO CRD42016036607.
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- 2018
34. Effect of interventions for non-emergent medical transportation: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Shekelle, Paul G., Begashaw, Meron M., Miake-Lye, Isomi M., Booth, Marika, Myers, Bethany, and Renda, Andrew
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- 2022
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35. Gender Differences in the Relationship Between Workplace Civility and Burnout Among VA Primary Care Providers
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Apaydin, Eric A., Rose, Danielle E., Yano, Elizabeth M., Shekelle, Paul G., Stockdale, Susan E., and Mohr, David C.
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- 2022
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36. Economic Evaluation of Quality Improvement Interventions Designed to Improve Glycemic Control in Diabetes: A Systematic Review and Weighted Regression Analysis
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Nuckols, Teryl K, Keeler, Emmett, Anderson, Laura J, Green, Jonas, Morton, Sally C, Doyle, Brian J, Shetty, Kanaka, Arifkhanova, Aziza, Booth, Marika, Shanman, Roberta, and Shekelle, Paul
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Cost Effectiveness Research ,Health Services ,Diabetes ,Clinical Research ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Quality Improvement ,Quality of Life ,Quality-Adjusted Life Years ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Regression Analysis ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveQuality improvement (QI) interventions can improve glycemic control, but little is known about their value. We systematically reviewed economic evaluations of QI interventions for glycemic control among adults with type 1 or type 2 diabetes.Research design and methodsWe used English-language studies from high-income countries that evaluated organizational changes and reported program and utilization-related costs, chosen from PubMed, EconLit, Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, New York Academy of Medicine's Grey Literature Report, and WorldCat (January 2004 to August 2016). We extracted data regarding intervention, study design, change in HbA1c, time horizon, perspective, incremental net cost (studies lasting ≤3 years), incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) (studies lasting ≥20 years), and study quality. Weighted least-squares regression analysis was used to estimate mean changes in HbA1c and incremental net cost.ResultsOf 3,646 records, 46 unique studies were eligible. Across 19 randomized controlled trials (RCTs), HbA1c declined by 0.26% (95% CI 0.17-0.35) or 3 mmol/mol (2 to 4) relative to usual care. In 8 RCTs lasting ≤3 years, incremental net costs were $116 (95% CI -$612 to $843) per patient annually. Long-term ICERs were $100,000-$115,000/quality-adjusted life year (QALY) in 3 RCTs, $50,000-$99,999/QALY in 1 RCT, $0-$49,999/QALY in 4 RCTs, and dominant in 1 RCT. Results were more favorable in non-RCTs. Our limitations include the fact that the studies had diverse designs and involved moderate risk of bias.ConclusionsDiverse multifaceted QI interventions that lower HbA1c appear to be a fair-to-good value relative to usual care, depending on society's willingness to pay for improvements in health.
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- 2018
37. The Cost of Interventions to Increase Influenza Vaccination: A Systematic Review.
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Anderson, Laura, Shekelle, Paul, Keeler, Emmett, Uscher-Pines, Lori, Shanman, Roberta, Morton, Sally, Aliyev, Gursel, and Nuckols, Teryl
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Cost Savings ,Cost of Illness ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Humans ,Immunization Programs ,Influenza Vaccines ,Influenza ,Human ,Mass Vaccination ,Quality Improvement ,Quality-Adjusted Life Years - Abstract
CONTEXT: Influenza vaccination rates remain below Healthy People 2020 goals. This project sought to systematically review economic evaluations of healthcare-based quality improvement interventions for improving influenza vaccination uptake among general populations and healthcare workers. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: The databases MEDLINE, Econlit, Centre for Reviews & Dissemination, Greylit, and Worldcat were searched in July 2016 for papers published from January 2004 to July 2016. Eligible studies evaluated efforts by bodies within the healthcare system to encourage influenza vaccination by means of an organizational or structural change. For each study, program costs per enrollee and per additional enrollee vaccinated were derived (excluding vaccine costs, standardized to 2017 U.S. dollars). Complete economic evaluations were examined when available. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: Of 2,350 records, 18 articles were eligible and described 29 unique interventions. Most interventions improved vaccine uptake. Among 23 interventions in general populations, the median program cost was $3.27 (interquartile range, $0.82-$11.53) per enrollee and $50.78 (interquartile range, $27.85-$124.84) per additional enrollee vaccinated. Among ten complete economic evaluations in general populations, three studies reported net cost savings, four reported costs
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- 2018
38. Recruiting Rural Healthcare Providers Today: a Systematic Review of Training Program Success and Determinants of Geographic Choices
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MacQueen, Ian T, Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, Capra, Gina, Raaen, Laura, Ulloa, Jesus G, Shekelle, Paul G, Miake-Lye, Isomi, Beroes, Jessica M, and Hempel, Susanne
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Rural Health ,Health Services ,Career Choice ,Decision Making ,Female ,Health Personnel ,Humans ,Male ,Medically Underserved Area ,Professional Practice Location ,Rural Health Services ,United States ,rural health ,provider shortages ,provider recruitment ,student training ,General & Internal Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundRural areas have historically struggled with shortages of healthcare providers; however, advanced communication technologies have transformed rural healthcare, and practice in underserved areas has been recognized as a policy priority. This systematic review aims to assess reasons for current providers' geographic choices and the success of training programs aimed at increasing rural provider recruitment.MethodsThis systematic review (PROSPERO: CRD42015025403) searched seven databases for published and gray literature on the current cohort of US rural healthcare practitioners (2005 to March 2017). Two reviewers independently screened citations for inclusion; one reviewer extracted data and assessed risk of bias, with a senior systematic reviewer checking the data; quality of evidence was assessed using the GRADE approach.ResultsOf 7276 screened citations, we identified 31 studies exploring reasons for geographic choices and 24 studies documenting the impact of training programs. Growing up in a rural community is a key determinant and is consistently associated with choosing rural practice. Most existing studies assess physicians, and only a few are based on multivariate analyses that take competing and potentially correlated predictors into account. The success rate of placing providers-in-training in rural practice after graduation, on average, is 44% (range 20-84%; N = 31 programs). We did not identify program characteristics that are consistently associated with program success. Data are primarily based on rural tracks for medical residents.DiscussionThe review provides insight into the relative importance of demographic characteristics and motivational factors in determining which providers should be targeted to maximize return on recruitment efforts. Existing programs exposing students to rural practice during their training are promising but require further refining. Public policy must include a specific focus on the trajectory of the healthcare workforce and must consider alternative models of healthcare delivery that promote a more diverse, interdisciplinary combination of providers.
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- 2018
39. Clinical and Cost Outcomes of Robot-Assisted Inguinal Hernia Repair: A Systematic Review
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Begashaw, Meron, Childers, Christopher P., Shekelle, Paul S., Ye, Linda, Tang, Amber B., Shenoy, Rivfka, Mederos, Michael A., Mak, Selene S., Booth, Marika S., Wilson, Mark, Gunnar, William, Girgis, Mark D., and Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda
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- 2021
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40. Hyaluronic acid injection therapy for osteoarthritis of the knee: concordant efficacy and conflicting serious adverse events in two systematic reviews
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O’Hanlon, Claire E, Newberry, Sydne J, Booth, Marika, Grant, Sean, Motala, Aneesa, Maglione, Margaret A, FitzGerald, John D, and Shekelle, Paul G
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Cancer ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Pain Research ,Arthritis ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Pain ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Musculoskeletal ,Humans ,Hyaluronic Acid ,Injections ,Intra-Articular ,Knee Joint ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Review Literature as Topic ,Osteoarthritis ,knee ,Hyaluronic acid ,Viscosupplementation ,Adverse events ,Osteoarthritis ,knee ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe prevalence of knee osteoarthritis (OA)/degenerative joint disease (DJD) is increasing in the USA. Systematic reviews of treatment efficacy and adverse events (AEs) of hyaluronic acid (HA) injections report conflicting evidence about the balance of benefits and harms. We review evidence on efficacy and AEs of intraarticular viscosupplementation with HA in older individuals with knee osteoarthritis and account for differences in these conclusions from another systematic review.MethodsWe searched PubMed and eight other databases and gray literature sources from 1990 to December 12, 2014. Double-blind placebo-controlled randomized controlled trials (RCTs) reporting functional outcomes or quality-of-life; RCTs and observational studies on delay/avoidance of arthroplasty; RCTs, case reports, and large cohort studies and case series assessing safety; and systematic reviews reporting on knee pain were considered for inclusion. A standardized, pre-defined protocol was applied by two independent reviewers to screen titles and abstracts, review full text, and extract details on study design, interventions, outcomes, and quality. We compared our results with those of a prior systematic review and found them to be discrepant; our analysis of why this discrepancy occurred is the focus of this manuscript.ResultsEighteen RCTs reported functional outcomes: pooled analysis of ten placebo-controlled, blinded trials showed a standardized mean difference of -0.23 (95 % confidence interval (CI) -0.45 to -0.01) favoring HA at 6 months. Studies reported few serious adverse events (SAEs) and no significant differences in non-serious adverse events (NSAEs) (relative risk (RR) [95 % CI] 1.03 [0.93-1.15] or SAEs (RR [95 % CI] 1.39 [0.78-2.47]). A recent prior systematic review reported similar functional outcomes, but significant SAE risk. Differences in SAE inclusion and synthesis accounted for the disparate conclusions.ConclusionsTrials show a small but significant effect of HA on function on which recent systematic reviews agree, but lack of AE synthesis standardization leads to opposite conclusions about the balance of benefits and harms. A limitation of the re-analysis of the prior systematic review is that it required imputation of missing data.
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- 2016
41. Optimizing health IT to improve health system performance: A work in progress
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Rudin, Robert S., Fischer, Shira H., Damberg, Cheryl L., Shi, Yunfeng, Shekelle, Paul G., Xenakis, Lea, Khodyakov, Dmitry, and Ridgely, M. Susan
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- 2020
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42. Making healthcare safer IV: Marking a quarter century of patient safety improvement.
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Rosen, Michael A., Shekelle, Paul G., Treadwell, Jonathan R., Stewart, C. Matthew, Sharma, Ritu, and Bass, Eric B.
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MEDICATION error prevention , *SERIAL publications , *PATIENT safety , *MEDICAL quality control , *MEDICAL errors , *RISK management in business , *MEDICAL care , *DIAGNOSTIC errors , *PATIENT care , *HEALTH care industry - Abstract
An editorial is presented which highlights the "Making Healthcare Safer IV" initiative, reviewing and updating patient safety practices after 25 years. It emphasizes the importance of adopting effective strategies for reducing medication errors, improving opioid stewardship, and minimizing adverse drug events.
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- 2024
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43. Clinical Effectiveness and Resource Utilization of Surgery versus Endovascular Therapy for Chronic Limb–Threatening Ischemia
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Lamaina, Margherita, Childers, Christopher P., Liu, Charles, Mak, Selene S., Booth, Marika S., Conte, Michael S., Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, and Shekelle, Paul G.
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- 2020
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44. What Are the Determinants of Health System Performance? Findings from the Literature and a Technical Expert Panel
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Ridgely, M. Susan, Ahluwalia, Sangeeta C., Tom, Ashlyn, Vaiana, Mary E., Motala, Aneesa, Silverman, Marissa, Kim, Alice, Damberg, Cheryl L., and Shekelle, Paul G.
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- 2020
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45. Scaling Beyond Early Adopters: a Content Analysis of Literature and Key Informant Perspectives
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Miake-Lye, Isomi, Mak, Selene, Lam, Christine A., Lambert-Kerzner, Anne C., Delevan, Deborah, Olmos-Ochoa, Tanya, and Shekelle, Paul
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- 2021
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46. The Quality of Care Provided to Women with Urinary Incontinence in 2 Clinical Settings
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Anger, Jennifer T, Alas, Alexandriah, Litwin, Mark S, Chu, Stephanie D, Bresee, Catherine, Roth, Carol P, Rashid, Rezoana, Shekelle, Paul, and Wenger, Neil S
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Patient Safety ,Urologic Diseases ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Renal and urogenital ,Disease Management ,Exercise Therapy ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Pilot Projects ,Primary Health Care ,Quality Indicators ,Health Care ,Quality of Health Care ,Urinary Incontinence ,urinary bladder ,urinary incontinence ,female urogenital diseases ,quality indicators ,health care ,quality of health care ,quality indicators ,health care ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
PurposeOur aim was to test the feasibility of a set of quality of care indicators for urinary incontinence and at the same time measure the care provided to women with urinary incontinence in 2 clinical settings.Materials and methodsThis was a pilot test of a set of quality of care indicators. A total of 20 quality of care indicators were previously developed using the RAND Appropriateness Method. These quality of care indicators were used to measure care received for 137 women with a urinary incontinence diagnosis in a 120-physician hospital based multispecialty medical group. We also performed an abstraction of 146 patient records from primary care offices in Southern California. These charts were previously used as part of ACOVE (Assessing Care of Vulnerable Elders Project). As a post-hoc secondary analysis, the 2 populations were compared with respect to quality, as measured by compliance with the quality of care indicators.ResultsIn the ACOVE population, 37.7% of patients with urinary incontinence underwent a pelvic examination vs 97.8% in the multispecialty medical group. Only 15.6% of cases in the multispecialty medical group and 14.2% in ACOVE (p = 0.86) had documentation that pelvic floor exercises were offered. Relatively few women with a body mass index of greater than 25 kg/m(2) were counseled about weight loss in either population (20.9% multispecialty medical group vs 26.1% ACOVE, p = 0.76). For women undergoing sling surgery, documentation of counseling about risks was lacking and only 9.3% of eligible cases (multispecialty medical group only) had documentation of the risks of mesh.ConclusionsQuality of care indicators are a feasible means to measure the care provided to women with urinary incontinence. Care varied by population studied and yet deficiencies in care were prevalent in both patient populations studied.
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- 2016
47. An evidence map of the effect of Tai Chi on health outcomes.
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Solloway, Michele R, Taylor, Stephanie L, Shekelle, Paul G, Miake-Lye, Isomi M, Beroes, Jessica M, Shanman, Roberta M, and Hempel, Susanne
- Subjects
Humans ,Osteoarthritis ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Hypertension ,Tai Ji ,Exercise ,Depression ,Mental Health ,Cognition ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Accidental Falls ,Aging ,Quality of Life ,Health ,Muscle Strength ,Postural Balance ,Pain Management ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Evidence map ,Systematic review ,Tai Chi ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThis evidence map describes the volume and focus of Tai Chi research reporting health outcomes. Originally developed as a martial art, Tai Chi is typically taught as a series of slow, low-impact movements that integrate the breath, mind, and physical activity to achieve greater awareness and a sense of well-being.MethodsThe evidence map is based on a systematic review of systematic reviews. We searched 11 electronic databases from inception to February 2014, screened reviews of reviews, and consulted with topic experts. We used a bubble plot to graphically display clinical topics, literature size, number of reviews, and a broad estimate of effectiveness.ResultsThe map is based on 107 systematic reviews. Two thirds of the reviews were published in the last five years. The topics with the largest number of published randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were general health benefits (51 RCTs), psychological well-being (37 RCTs), interventions for older adults (31 RCTs), balance (27 RCTs), hypertension (18 RCTs), fall prevention (15 RCTs), and cognitive performance (11 RCTs). The map identified a number of areas with evidence of a potentially positive treatment effect on patient outcomes, including Tai Chi for hypertension, fall prevention outside of institutions, cognitive performance, osteoarthritis, depression, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pain, balance confidence, and muscle strength. However, identified reviews cautioned that firm conclusions cannot be drawn due to methodological limitations in the original studies and/or an insufficient number of existing research studies.ConclusionsTai Chi has been applied in diverse clinical areas, and for a number of these, systematic reviews have indicated promising results. The evidence map provides a visual overview of Tai Chi research volume and content.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42014009907.
- Published
- 2016
48. Development of the Quality Improvement Minimum Quality Criteria Set (QI-MQCS): a tool for critical appraisal of quality improvement intervention publications
- Author
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Hempel, Susanne, Shekelle, Paul G, Liu, Jodi L, Danz, Margie Sherwood, Foy, Robbie, Lim, Yee-Wei, Motala, Aneesa, and Rubenstein, Lisa V
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Generic health relevance ,Health Services Research ,Humans ,Periodicals as Topic ,Psychometrics ,Publishing ,Quality Improvement ,Reproducibility of Results ,Evaluation methodology ,Evidence-based medicine ,Healthcare quality improvement ,Quality improvement ,Quality improvement methodologies ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Health Policy & Services - Abstract
ObjectiveValid, reliable critical appraisal tools advance quality improvement (QI) intervention impacts by helping stakeholders identify higher quality studies. QI approaches are diverse and differ from clinical interventions. Widely used critical appraisal instruments do not take unique QI features into account and existing QI tools (eg, Standards for QI Reporting Excellence) are intended for publication guidance rather than critical appraisal. This study developed and psychometrically tested a critical appraisal instrument, the QI Minimum Quality Criteria Set (QI-MQCS) for assessing QI-specific features of QI publications.MethodsApproaches to developing the tool and ensuring validity included a literature review, in-person and online survey expert panel input, and application to empirical examples. We investigated psychometric properties in a set of diverse QI publications (N=54) by analysing reliability measures and item endorsement rates and explored sources of disagreement between reviewers.ResultsThe QI-MQCS includes 16 content domains to evaluate QI intervention publications: Organisational Motivation, Intervention Rationale, Intervention Description, Organisational Characteristics, Implementation, Study Design, Comparator Description, Data Sources, Timing, Adherence/Fidelity, Health Outcomes, Organisational Readiness, Penetration/Reach, Sustainability, Spread and Limitations. Median inter-rater agreement for QI-MQCS items was κ 0.57 (83% agreement). Item statistics indicated sufficient ability to differentiate between publications (median quality criteria met 67%). Internal consistency measures indicated coherence without excessive conceptual overlap (absolute mean interitem correlation=0.19). The critical appraisal instrument is accompanied by a user manual detailing What to consider, Where to look and How to rate.ConclusionsWe developed a ready-to-use, valid and reliable critical appraisal instrument applicable to healthcare QI intervention publications, but recognise scope for continuing refinement.
- Published
- 2015
49. Systematic review of school-based interventions to prevent smoking for girls
- Author
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de Kleijn, Miriam JJ, Farmer, Melissa M, Booth, Marika, Motala, Aneesa, Smith, Alexandria, Sherman, Scott, Assendelft, Willem JJ, and Shekelle, Paul
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Tobacco ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Prevention ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Cancer ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Respiratory ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Female ,Humans ,Program Evaluation ,School Health Services ,Schools ,Smoking Prevention ,Cigarette smoking ,Systematic review ,Girls ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe purpose of this review is to study the effect of school-based interventions on smoking prevention for girls.MethodsWe performed a systematic review of articles published since 1992 on school-based tobacco-control interventions in controlled trials for smoking prevention among children. We searched the databases of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, The Cochrane Databases, CINAHL, Social Science Abstracts, and PsycInfo. Two reviewers independently assessed trials for inclusion and quality and extracted data. A pooled random-effects estimate was estimated of the overall relative risk.ResultsThirty-seven trials were included, of which 16 trials with 24,210 girls were included in the pooled analysis. The overall pooled effect was a relative risk (RR) of 0.96 (95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.86-1.08; I (2)=75 %). One study in which a school-based intervention was combined with a mass media intervention showed more promising results compared to only school-based prevention, and four studies with girl-specific interventions, that could not be included in the pooled analysis, reported statistically significant benefits for attitudes and intentions about smoking and quit rates.ConclusionsThere was no evidence that school-based smoking prevention programs have a significant effect on preventing adolescent girls from smoking. Combining school-based programs with mass media interventions, and developing girl-specific interventions, deserve additional study as potentially more effective interventions compared to school-based-only intervention programs.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42012002322.
- Published
- 2015
50. Preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis protocols (PRISMA-P) 2015 statement
- Author
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Moher, David, Shamseer, Larissa, Clarke, Mike, Ghersi, Davina, Liberati, Alessandro, Petticrew, Mark, Shekelle, Paul, Stewart, Lesley A, and PRISMA-P Group
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Cancer ,Access to Information ,Checklist ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Guideline Adherence ,Humans ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Publishing ,Quality Control ,Systematic Reviews as Topic ,PRISMA-P Group ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
Systematic reviews should build on a protocol that describes the rationale, hypothesis, and planned methods of the review; few reviews report whether a protocol exists. Detailed, well-described protocols can facilitate the understanding and appraisal of the review methods, as well as the detection of modifications to methods and selective reporting in completed reviews. We describe the development of a reporting guideline, the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses for Protocols 2015 (PRISMA-P 2015). PRISMA-P consists of a 17-item checklist intended to facilitate the preparation and reporting of a robust protocol for the systematic review. Funders and those commissioning reviews might consider mandating the use of the checklist to facilitate the submission of relevant protocol information in funding applications. Similarly, peer reviewers and editors can use the guidance to gauge the completeness and transparency of a systematic review protocol submitted for publication in a journal or other medium.
- Published
- 2015
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