Abstract

BackgroundClinical guidelines recommend that assessment and management of patients with stroke commences early including in emergency departments (ED). To inform the development of an implementation intervention targeted in ED, we conducted a systematic review of qualitative and quantitative studies to identify relevant barriers and enablers to six key clinical behaviours in acute stroke care: appropriate triage, thrombolysis administration, monitoring and management of temperature, blood glucose levels, and of swallowing difficulties and transfer of stroke patients in ED.MethodsStudies of any design, conducted in ED, where barriers or enablers based on primary data were identified for one or more of these six clinical behaviours. Major biomedical databases (CINAHL, OVID SP EMBASE, OVID SP MEDLINE) were searched using comprehensive search strategies. The barriers and enablers were categorised using the theoretical domains framework (TDF). The behaviour change technique (BCT) that best aligned to the strategy each enabler represented was selected for each of the reported enablers using a standard taxonomy.ResultsFive qualitative studies and four surveys out of the 44 studies identified met the selection criteria. The majority of barriers reported corresponded with the TDF domains of “environmental, context and resources” (such as stressful working conditions or lack of resources) and “knowledge” (such as lack of guideline awareness or familiarity). The majority of enablers corresponded with the domains of “knowledge” (such as education for physicians on the calculated risk of haemorrhage following intravenous thrombolysis [tPA]) and “skills” (such as providing opportunity to treat stroke cases of varying complexity). The total number of BCTs assigned was 18. The BCTs most frequently assigned to the reported enablers were “focus on past success” and “information about health consequences.”ConclusionsBarriers and enablers for the delivery of key evidence-based protocols in an emergency setting have been identified and interpreted within a relevant theoretical framework. This new knowledge has since been used to select specific BCTs to implement evidence-based care in an ED setting. It is recommended that findings from similar future reviews adopt a similar theoretical approach. In particular, the use of existing matrices to assist the selection of relevant BCTs.

Highlights

  • Clinical guidelines recommend that assessment and management of patients with stroke commences early including in emergency departments (ED)

  • It is recommended that findings from similar future reviews adopt a similar theoretical approach

  • The use of existing matrices to assist the selection of relevant behaviour change technique (BCT)

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical guidelines recommend that assessment and management of patients with stroke commences early including in emergency departments (ED). Clinical guidelines recommend that the assessment and management of patients with stroke should commence early in the pre-hospital setting and hospital emergency department (ED) [1]. Systematic reviews offer a way to synthesise the broad range of barriers and enablers reported in individual studies and provide a broader understanding of the influences on evidence-based treatment uptake. Findings from such reviews can be used to inform the development of effective interventions to implement evidencebased care in clinical settings

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