Premium
Do obstetricians apply the national guidelines? A vignette‐based study assessing practices for the prevention of preterm birth
Author(s) -
Rousseau A,
Azria E,
Baumann S,
DeneuxTharaux C,
Senat MV
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
bjog: an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.157
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1471-0528
pISSN - 1470-0328
DOI - 10.1111/1471-0528.16039
Subject(s) - vignette , medicine , guideline , family medicine , qualitative research , nursing , psychology , social psychology , social science , pathology , sociology
Objective To describe spontaneous preterm birth prevention practices self‐reported before and after the dissemination of relevant guidelines, and to identify personal and organisational factors associated with adherence. Design A repeated cross‐sectional vignette‐based survey study. Setting French obstetricians. Population French obstetricians practicing in public or private maternity units. Methods Before and after the dissemination of the 2017 French guidelines on the prevention of spontaneous preterm birth, participants were asked to complete a web‐based self‐administered questionnaire based on two clinical vignettes. Vignette 1 focused on respondents’ attitudes towards strict bed rest, cerclage, and progesterone treatment for women with a short cervix in mid‐trimester; vignette 2 focused on attitudes towards strict bed rest and maintenance tocolysis after successful tocolysis for preterm labour. A mixed quantitative and qualitative analysis was conducted. Main outcome measures Non‐adherence to guidelines for the prevention of spontaneous preterm birth in responses to each vignette. Results We obtained complete responses from 286 obstetricians before and 282 obstetricians after guideline dissemination, including 145 obstetricians participating in both. After dissemination, 51.4% of obstetricians self‐reported non‐adherent practices for vignette 1 and 22.3% of obstetricians self‐reported non‐adherent practices for vignette 2. No improvement was observed after dissemination. The quantitative analysis identified factors associated with non‐adherence, including older age and practice in non‐university or small hospitals, whereas the qualitative analysis highlighted barriers to implementation, including fear of change, habits, work overload, and lack of time. Conclusions Adherence to guidelines was generally low, with practices unmodified by their dissemination. Improvement is required, especially regarding applicability. Tweetable abstract Adherence to guidelines to prevent spontaneous preterm birth was generally low and remained unmodified after guideline dissemination.