Abstract

BackgroundTwo to 4% of emergency hospital admissions are caused by preventable adverse drug events. The estimated costs of such avoidable admissions in England were £530 million in 2015. The data-driven quality improvement in primary care (DQIP) intervention was designed to prompt review of patients vulnerable from currently prescribed non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and anti-platelets and was found to be effective at reducing this prescribing. A process evaluation was conducted parallel to the trial, and this paper reports the analysis which aimed to explore response to the intervention delivered to clusters in relation to participants’ perceptions about which intervention elements were active in changing their practice.MethodsData generation was by in-depth interview with key staff exploring participant’s perceptions of the intervention components. Analysis was iterative using the framework technique and drawing on normalisation process theory.ResultsAll the primary components of the intervention were perceived as active, but at different stages of implementation: financial incentives primarily supported recruitment; education motivated the GPs to initiate implementation; the informatics tool facilitated sustained implementation. Participants perceived the primary components as interdependent. Intervention subcomponents also varied in whether and when they were active. For example, run charts providing feedback of change in prescribing over time were ignored in the informatics tool, but were motivating in some practices in the regular e-mailed newsletter. The high-risk NSAID and anti-platelet prescribing targeted was accepted as important by all interviewees, and this shared understanding was a key wider context underlying intervention effectiveness.ConclusionsThis was a novel use of process evaluation data which examined whether and how the individual intervention components were effective from the perspective of the professionals delivering changed care to patients. These findings are important for reproducibility and roll-out of the intervention.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01425502.

Highlights

  • Two to 4% of emergency hospital admissions are caused by preventable adverse drug events

  • We present the qualitative analysis from the remaining Normalisation process theory (NPT) constructs: cognitive participation, collective action, and reflective monitoring (Process evaluation of the data-driven quality improvement in primary care (DQIP) trial: case-study evaluation of adoption and maintenance of a complex intervention to reduce high-risk primary care prescribing

  • The findings presented are from 38 professional interviews

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Summary

Introduction

Two to 4% of emergency hospital admissions are caused by preventable adverse drug events. The data-driven quality improvement in primary care (DQIP) intervention was designed to prompt review of patients vulnerable from currently prescribed non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and anti-platelets and was found to be effective at reducing this prescribing. A large proportion of these admissions are caused by high-risk prescribing of commonly prescribed drugs, with non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and anti-platelets being the main or among the main drugs implicated, causing gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, and renal adverse events [5,6,7]. The trial analysis of the primary outcome showed that across all practices, the targeted high-risk prescribing fell during the intervention period (from 3.7% immediately before to 2.2% at the end of the intervention period (adjusted OR 0.63 [95%CI 0.57–0.68], p < 0.0001).

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