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Effect of enhanced feedback to hospitals that are part of an emerging clinical information network on uptake of revised childhood pneumonia treatment policy: study protocol for a cluster randomized trial.
- Source :
- Trials; 9/7/2017, Vol. 18, p1-9, 9p, 2 Diagrams
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- <bold>Background: </bold>The national pneumonia treatment guidelines in Kenya changed in February 2016 but such guideline changes are often characterized by prolonged delays in affecting practice. We designed an enhanced feedback intervention, delivered within an ongoing clinical network that provides a general form of feedback, aimed at improving and sustaining uptake of the revised pneumonia treatment policy. The objective was to determine whether an enhanced feedback intervention will improve correctness of classification and treatment of childhood pneumonia, compared to an existing approach to feedback, after nationwide treatment policy change and within an existing hospital network.<bold>Methods/design: </bold>A pragmatic, cluster randomized trial conducted within a clinical network of 12 Kenyan county referral hospitals providing inpatient pediatric care to children (aged 2-59 months) with acute medical conditions between March and November 2016. The intervention comprised enhanced feedback (monthly written feedback incorporating goal setting, and action planning delivered by a senior clinical coordinator for selected pneumonia indicators) and this was compared to standard feedback (2-monthly written feedback on multiple quality of pediatric care indicators) both delivered within a clinical network promoting clinical leadership linked to mentorship and peer-to-peer support, and improved use of health information on service delivery. The 12 hospitals were randomized to receive either enhanced feedback (nā=ā6) or standard feedback (nā=ā6) delivered over a 9-month period following nationwide pneumonia treatment policy change. The primary outcome is the proportion of all admitted patients with pneumonia (fulfilling criteria for treatment with orally administered amoxicillin) who are correctly classified and treated in the first 24 h. The secondary outcome will be measured over the course of the admission as any change in treatment for pneumonia after the first 24 h.<bold>Discussion: </bold>This trial protocol employs a pragmatic trial design during a period of nationwide change in treatment guidelines to address two high-priority areas within implementation research: promoting adoption of health policies and optimizing effectiveness of feedback.<bold>Trial Registration: </bold>ClinicalTrials.gov, ID: NCT02817971 . Registered retrospectively on 27 June 2016. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- PNEUMONIA treatment
PNEUMONIA in children
HEALTH policy
HEALTH outcome assessment
CLUSTER randomized controlled trials
PNEUMONIA diagnosis
QUALITY assurance standards
HOSPITAL information systems
ADAPTABILITY (Personality)
AMOXICILLIN
ANTIBIOTICS
ATTITUDE (Psychology)
CLINICAL medicine
COMPARATIVE studies
EXPERIMENTAL design
HEALTH attitudes
HEALTH care teams
HOSPITALS
HOSPITAL laws
LEADERSHIP
RESEARCH methodology
MEDICAL cooperation
MEDICAL personnel
MENTORING
RESEARCH protocols
ORAL drug administration
PNEUMONIA
POLICY sciences
RESEARCH
RESEARCH funding
AFFINITY groups
EVALUATION research
KEY performance indicators (Management)
RANDOMIZED controlled trials
STANDARDS
MEDICAL laws
LAW
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 17456215
- Volume :
- 18
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Trials
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 125040248
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-017-2152-8