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Improving the identification and management of chronic kidney disease in primary care: lessons from a staged improvement collaborative
- Source :
- International Journal for Quality in Health Care
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press (OUP), 2014.
-
Abstract
- QUALITY PROBLEM: Undiagnosed chronic kidney disease (CKD) contributes to a high cost and care burden in secondary care. Uptake of evidence-based guidelines in primary care is inconsistent, resulting in variation in the detection and management of CKD. INITIAL ASSESSMENT: Routinely collected general practice data in one UK region suggested a CKD prevalence of 4.1%, compared with an estimated national prevalence of 8.5%. Of patients on CKD registers, ∼ 30% were estimated to have suboptimal management according to Public Health Observatory analyses. CHOICE OF SOLUTION: An evidence-based framework for implementation was developed. This informed the design of an improvement collaborative to work with a sample of 30 general practices. IMPLEMENTATION: A two-phase collaborative was implemented between September 2009 and March 2012. Key elements of the intervention included learning events, improvement targets, Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles, benchmarking of audit data, facilitator support and staff time reimbursement. EVALUATION: Outcomes were evaluated against two indicators: number of patients with CKD on practice registers; percentage of patients achieving evidence-based blood pressure (BP) targets, as a marker for CKD care. In Phase 1, recorded prevalence of CKD in collaborative practices increased ∼ 2-fold more than that in comparator local practices; in Phase 2, this increased to 4-fold, indicating improved case identification. Management of BP according to guideline recommendations also improved. LESSONS LEARNED: An improvement collaborative with tailored facilitation support appears to promote the uptake of evidence-based guidance on the identification and management of CKD in primary care. A controlled evaluation study is needed to rigorously evaluate the impact of this promising improvement intervention.
- Subjects :
- Program evaluation
medicine.medical_specialty
Evidence-based practice
Quality management
Blood Pressure
Audit
primary care
Prevalence
medicine
Humans
Renal Insufficiency, Chronic
Disease management (health)
implementation
Reimbursement
Primary Health Care
business.industry
Health Policy
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Disease Management
improvement collaborative
General Medicine
Guideline
medicine.disease
Quality Improvement
Benchmarking
evidence-based guidance
Family medicine
Papers
Insurance, Health, Reimbursement
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Guideline Adherence
business
chronic kidney disease
Program Evaluation
Kidney disease
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14643677 and 13534505
- Volume :
- 27
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International Journal for Quality in Health Care
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....295573820998183a4fb652828da81768
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzu097