Abstract

BackgroundAudit and feedback (A&F) is a strategy that has been used in various disciplines for performance and quality improvement. There is limited research regarding medical professionals’ acceptance of clinical-performance feedback and whether feedback impacts clinical practice. The objectives of our research were to (1) investigate aspects of A&F that impact physicians’ acceptance of performance feedback; (2) determine actions physicians take when receiving feedback; and (3) determine if feedback impacts physicians’ patient-management behavior.MethodsIn this qualitative study, we employed grounded theory methods to perform a secondary analysis of semi-structured interviews with 12 VA primary care physicians. We analyzed a subset of interview questions from the primary study, which aimed to determine how providers of high, low and moderately performing VA medical centers use performance feedback to maintain and improve quality of care, and determine perceived utility of performance feedback.ResultsBased on the themes emergent from our analysis and their observed relationships, we developed a model depicting aspects of the A&F process that impact feedback acceptance and physicians’ patient-management behavior. The model is comprised of three core components – Reaction, Action and Impact – and depicts elements associated with feedback recipients’ reaction to feedback, action taken when feedback is received, and physicians modifying their patient-management behavior. Feedback characteristics, the environment, external locus-of-control components, core values, emotion and the assessment process induce or deter reaction, action and impact.Feedback characteristics (content and timeliness), and the procedural justice of the assessment process (unjust penalties) impact feedback acceptance. External locus-of-control elements (financial incentives, competition), the environment (patient volume, time constraints) and emotion impact patient-management behavior. Receiving feedback generated intense emotion within physicians. The underlying source of the emotion was the assessment process, not the feedback. The emotional response impacted acceptance, impelled action or inaction, and impacted patient-management behavior. Emotion intensity was associated with type of action taken (defensive, proactive, retroactive).ConclusionsFeedback acceptance and impact have as much to do with the performance assessment process as it does the feedback. In order to enhance feedback acceptance and the impact of feedback, developers of clinical performance systems and feedback interventions should consider multiple design elements.

Highlights

  • Audit and feedback (A&F) is a strategy that has been used in various disciplines for performance and quality improvement

  • Aspects of A&F that induce or deter reaction, action and impact include feedback features, the assessment process, environmental factors, core values, external locus of control and emotion

  • Our findings further extend prior research in that we sought to penetrate the mind of the feedback recipient, advanced medical professionals, to understand what influences feedback acceptance and induce them to modify their patientmanagement behavior to enhance performance

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Summary

Introduction

Audit and feedback (A&F) is a strategy that has been used in various disciplines for performance and quality improvement. Limited research exists regarding medical professionals’ uptake or response to clinical-performance feedback and whether feedback impacts how clinicians manage patients, two important contextual components of feedback [7, 10]. With less-than-optimal clinical outcomes in some cases even after receiving feedback, [5] there is a need to investigate the mind of the feedback recipient to determine factors associated with acceptance and alteration of patient-management behavior to enhance performance. An understanding of these factors will enable development of strategies to provide clinicians with actionable, impactful feedback

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