Impact of Complex Quality-Interventions on Patient Outcome: A Systematic Overview of Systematic Reviews
Author(s) -
Walther Felix,
Kuester Denise,
Schmitt Jochen
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
inquiry: the journal of health care organization, provision, and financing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.792
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1945-7243
pISSN - 0046-9580
DOI - 10.1177/0046958019884182
Subject(s) - psychological intervention , psycinfo , cinahl , systematic review , medline , medicine , quality (philosophy) , meta analysis , nursing , epistemology , law , philosophy , political science
Quality of care and the increasing strategies to its promotion, especially in inpatient settings, led to the question which quality-interventions work best and which do not. The aim was to summarize and critically appraise the evidence on the effects of structure- and/or process-related quality-interventions on patient outcome in predominantly controlled and inpatient settings. A systematic overview of systematic reviews after electronic searches in Medline, Embase, Cinahl, and PsycINFO, supplemented by hand search and expert survey, was conducted. From a total of 1559 identified records, 37 reviews fulfilled the inclusion criteria. 26 reviews assessed process-related quality-interventions, 6 structure-related quality-interventions, and 5 combined structure- and process-related quality-interventions. In all, 19 reviews reported pooled effect estimates (meta-analysis). Based on the evidence of this systematic overview, stroke units and pathways can be recommended. Although patient-relevant improvements for interprofessional approaches and discharge planning have been reported, pooled effect estimated evidence are currently missing for these and other quality-interventions.
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