Abstract

Background: In 2018, the Office of the Nursing and Midwifery Services Director (ONMSD) completed phase one of work which culminated in the development and launch of seven research reports with defined suites of quality care process metrics (QC-Ms) and respective indicators for the practice areas – acute care, midwifery, children’s, public health nursing, older persons, mental health and intellectual disability nursing in Ireland. This paper presents a rapid realist review protocol that will systematically review the literature that examines QC-M in practice; what worked, or did not work for whom, in what contexts, to what extent, how and why? Methods: The review will explore if there are benefits of using the QC-Ms and what are the contexts in which these mechanisms are triggered. The essence of this rapid realist review is to ascertain how a change in context generates a particular mechanism that produces specific outcomes. A number of steps will occur including locating existing theories on implementation of quality care metrics, searching the evidence, selecting relevant documents, data extraction, validation of findings, synthesising and refining programme theory. This strategy may help to describe potential consequences resulting from changes in context and their interactions with mechanisms. Initial theories will be refined throughout the process by the local reference panel, comprised of eight key intervention stakeholders, knowledge users such as healthcare professionals and an expert panel. Ethical approval is not required for this rapid realist review. Conclusion: It is anticipated that the final programme theory will help to explain how QC-Ms work in practice; for whom, why and in what circumstances. Findings of this review could help to give insights into realism as a framework and how nursing and midwifery QC-Ms have been implemented previously.

Highlights

  • An explanation of the term ‘quality care-metrics’ would be useful

  • Protocol This study aims to conduct an rapid realist review (RRR) that involves a synthesis of the international literature that generates programme theories to determine a better understanding of enablers and constraining influences related to the implementation of nursing/midwifery quality care process metrics

  • This study will aim to unpack the mechanism of how complex interventions (QCP-Ms) work in particular contexts and settings

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Summary

Introduction

An explanation of the term ‘quality care-metrics’ would be useful. The authors identify that nurses and midwives are at the centre of care delivery, delivering highquality and safe care, yet there is no definition describing what high-quality care entails. It is recommended that the authors include an explanation that quality care metrics are made up of process indicators within the same clinical domain. A number of steps will occur including locating existing theories on implementation of quality care metrics, searching the evidence, selecting relevant documents, data extraction, validation of findings, synthesising and refining programme theory. This strategy may help to describe potential consequences resulting from changes in context and their interactions with mechanisms. Initial theories will be refined throughout the process by the local reference version 2

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