Open Access
An appraisal of emergency medicine clinical practice guidelines: Do we agree?
Author(s) -
Zupon Alyssa,
Rothenberg Craig,
Couturier Katherine,
Tan TingXu,
Siddiqui Gina,
James Matthew,
Savage Dan,
Melnick Edward R.,
Venkatesh Arjun K.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of clinical practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.756
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 1742-1241
pISSN - 1368-5031
DOI - 10.1111/ijcp.13289
Subject(s) - medicine , clarity , evidence based medicine , medline , family medicine , alternative medicine , biochemistry , chemistry , pathology , political science , law
Summary Background Clinical practice guidelines ( CPG s) have been published by the American College of Emergency Physicians ( ACEP ) since 1990 to advance evidence‐based emergency care. ACEP clinical policies have drawn anecdotal criticism for bias, yet the overall quality of these guidelines has not previously been quantified. We sought to examine ACEP clinical policies using a recognised, validated appraisal instrument: Appraisal of Guidelines for Research & Evaluation ( AGREE II ). Methods Systematic assessment of current ACEP clinical policies was conducted using the AGREE II instrument, which contains 23 appraisal items (scored on a 1‐7 scale) in six domains and two overall assessments. Each policy was independently appraised by five trained appraisers. Primary outcomes were AGREE II ratings for each item, domain and “Overall Assessment,” and scores were reported as standardised percentages from all five appraisers. Secondary analyses examined associations between AGREE II ratings and policy publication date, strength of underlying evidence and strength of recommendations. Additional analysis examined relationships between domain and “Overall Assessment” ratings. Results Twenty guidelines published from April 2007 to November 2017 were included. Of the six domains, “Scope and Purpose” scored highest (mean 90%) and “Applicability” scored lowest (mean 35%). The four remaining domains (“Stakeholder Involvement,” “Rigor of Development,” “Clarity of Presentation” and “Editorial Independence”) had mean scores of 53%‐78%. The mean “Overall Assessment” rating was 69% and was not associated with policy publication date, strength of underlying evidence or strength of recommendations. We found positive associations between “Overall Assessment” ratings and two domains: “Rigor of Development” ( r = 0.70) and “Clarity of Presentation” ( r = 0.70). Conclusions Based on validated AGREE II criteria, ACEP clinical policies can be most improved by addressing their application in practice. ACEP clinical policies’ overall quality did not improve over the assessed time period and is not explained by the quality of underlying evidence.