Clinical Audit, Research or Service Evaluation Flashcards

1
Q

What is a clinical audit?

A

“a quality improvement process that seeks to improve patient care and outcomes through systematic review of care against explicit criteria and the implementation of change”

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2
Q

What is research?

A

“the attempt to derive generalisable new knowledge by addressing clearly defined questions with systematic and rigorous methods”

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3
Q

What is a service evaluation?

A
  • “a review process undertaken to define or judge a current service with the intention of benefiting those who use it:
    • Used to inform local practice
    • May result ins service redesign
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4
Q

Give some examples of service evaluation questions

A
  • Does the service achieve its objectives?
    • How?
    • What are the costs?
    • Components: Structure, process, outcome
  • Does the service (still) meet the patient’s needs?
  • Examples:
    • What are the patient experiences of attending a community pulmonary rehabilitation service?
    • What are the waiting times for patients attending A&E department in XXX hospital
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5
Q

Give some examples of clinical audit questions

A
  • Does this service reach a predetermined standard?
    • What proportion of patients presenting to A&E are seen within 4 hours?
    • What proportion of patients presenting with an STI are tested for HIV: compliance with national guidance?
    • What proportion of patients with diabetes have a 6-month review by their GP or practice nurse?
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6
Q

Give some examples of research questions

A
  • How do patient outcomes compare between this service (or treatment) and an alternative?  Quantitative Research (hypothesis test)
    • Example: What is the impact of a nurse-led dermatology clinic in primary care on the quality of life of children with eczema?
  • Parts to a (quantitative) research question: PICO
    • Patient/Intervention/Comparison/Outcome
  • Example: What are the concerns of women being recalled for a repeat cervical smear? … Qualitative Research (no stats)
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7
Q

Describe the overlap between research and audit

A
  • Research findings can identify areas for audit
  • Audit can be the final stage of a research project
  • Audit can help with dissemination of research findings
  • Audit can identify gaps in research evidence………
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8
Q

What are the common elements of research and audit?

A
  • Question-driven:
    • Research: what should we be doing
    • Audit: are we doing it right?
  • Professionally led
  • Influence on clinical practice
  • Formal data collection – use of a proforma
  • Can involve service users
  • Methodological rigour
  • Data analysis / interpretation
  • Publishable??
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9
Q

What are the two main types of audit?

A
  • Retrospective – notes review (beware missing data)
  • Prospective – ongoing data collection (beware the “Hawthorne effect”)
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10
Q

What are the main methods used in an audit?

A
  1. Identify a topic / problem
  2. Identify local resources (? local audit dept)
  3. Choose the standard, create the audit proforma
  4. Define the sample
  5. Collect data (? do a pilot)
  6. Compare data with the standard
  7. Develop and implement change
  8. Re-audit
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11
Q

What are the main criteria for choosing a topic?

A
  • Is the topic of high cost, high volume, or risk to staff or users?
  • Is there evidence of a serious quality problem, for example patient complaints or high complication rates?
  • Is evidence available to inform standards, for example systematic reviews or national clinical guidelines?
  • Is the problem amenable to change?
  • Is the topic a priority?
    • for the organisation?
    • for a national policy initiative?
  • Is there potential for involvement in a national audit project?
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12
Q

What are the main criteria for chosing a standard?

A
  • Agree the standard (minimal, ideal or optimal)
    • Minimal: lowest acceptable level of performance
    • Ideal: the care possible under ideal conditions (e.g. 100% survival ???) elusive!
    • Optimal: realistic under normal conditions of practice (somewhere between minimal and ideal)
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13
Q

What are major sources of evidence used for choosing a standard?

A

o National guidelines (e.g. NICE, SIGN)

o Cochrane database of systematic reviews

o MEDLINE, PubMed, EMBASE (check with NHS library)

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14
Q

What are the elements involved in selecting a sample?

A
  • Inclusion criteria
  • Exclusion criteria (e.g. comorbidities)
  • Size of sample: power calculations
  • Estimated percentage (P)
  • Standard error (SE) of percentage = √ [P (100 – P) / n] where ‘n’ = sample size
  • SE is a measure of the error of your estimate
  • Small ‘n’→ large error, Large ‘n’ → smaller error
  • SE used to derive a 95% confidence interval (95%CI)
  • 95%CI is an interval in which we are 95% confident that the TRUE percentage lies
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15
Q

Give the function of an audit

A

Assesses activity against an agreed standard of best practice

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16
Q

Give the function of service evaluation

A

Assesses the effectiveness of the service

17
Q

Give the function of research

A

Generates new knowledge