Abstract

BackgroundClinical practice guidelines are an important source of information, designed to help clinicians integrate research evidence into their clinical practice. Digital education is increasingly used for clinical practice guideline dissemination and adoption. Our aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of digital education in improving the adoption of clinical practice guidelines.MethodsWe performed a systematic review and searched seven electronic databases from January 1990 to September 2018. Two reviewers independently screened studies, extracted data and assessed risk of bias. We included studies in any language evaluating the effectiveness of digital education on clinical practice guidelines compared to other forms of education or no intervention in healthcare professionals. We used the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) approach to assess the quality of the body of evidence.ResultsSeventeen trials involving 2382 participants were included. The included studies were diverse with a largely unclear or high risk of bias. They mostly focused on physicians, evaluated computer-based interventions with limited interactivity and measured participants’ knowledge and behaviour. With regard to knowledge, studies comparing the effect of digital education with no intervention showed a moderate, statistically significant difference in favour of digital education intervention (SMD = 0.85, 95% CI 0.16, 1.54; I2 = 83%, n = 3, moderate quality of evidence). Studies comparing the effect of digital education with traditional learning on knowledge showed a small, statistically non-significant difference in favour of digital education (SMD = 0.23, 95% CI − 0.12, 0.59; I2 = 34%, n = 3, moderate quality of evidence). Three studies measured participants’ skills and reported mixed results. Of four studies measuring satisfaction, three studies favoured digital education over traditional learning. Of nine studies evaluating healthcare professionals’ behaviour change, only one study comparing email-delivered, spaced education intervention to no intervention reported improvement in the intervention group. Of three studies reporting patient outcomes, only one study comparing email-delivered, spaced education games to non-interactive online resources reported modest improvement in the intervention group. The quality of evidence for outcomes other than knowledge was mostly judged as low due to risk of bias, imprecision and/or inconsistency.ConclusionsHealth professions digital education on clinical practice guidelines is at least as effective as traditional learning and more effective than no intervention in terms of knowledge. Most studies report little or no difference in healthcare professionals’ behaviours and patient outcomes. The only intervention shown to improve healthcare professionals’ behaviour and modestly patient outcomes was email-delivered, spaced education. Future research should evaluate interactive, simulation-based and spaced forms of digital education and report on outcomes such as skills, behaviour, patient outcomes and cost.

Highlights

  • The translation of new research evidence into clinical practice can take up to 17 years [1]

  • While health professions education is an essential part of these multifaceted interventions, it is still commonly employed as the only guideline dissemination strategy [9]

  • After screening titles and abstracts, we retrieved full text for 4072 studies focusing on different digital education interventions for health professions education

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The translation of new research evidence into clinical practice can take up to 17 years [1]. Guidelines are evidence synthesis-based recommendations developed to support beneficial clinical practices, reduce unwanted variations and improve patient care outcomes [3, 4]. They are an important source of information for clinicians, designed to help them assimilate, evaluate and adopt evidence into their clinical practice [5]. Traditional learning for clinical practice guideline adoption was shown to lead to small improvement in desired clinical practices, with more interactive and engaging interventions showing greater effectiveness [10, 11]. Clinical practice guidelines are an important source of information, designed to help clinicians integrate research evidence into their clinical practice. Our aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of digital education in improving the adoption of clinical practice guidelines

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call