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Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative Practice
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Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

Mar 31, 2015

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Page 1: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices

Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP

Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative Practice

Page 2: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

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It starts with research

Page 3: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

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• It takes an average of 17 years to move research to practice

• EBP provides point of care clinicians tools needed to improve care

• EBP transforms health care based on one clinician, one encounter at a time

Why EBP?

Page 4: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

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Why EBP?

Page 5: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

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EBP

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• By individual clinical expertise we mean the proficiency and judgment that individual clinicians acquire through clinical experience and clinical practice. Increased expertise is reflected in many ways, but especially in more effective and efficient diagnosis and in the more thoughtful identification and compassionate use of individual patient’s predicaments, rights, and preferences in making clinical decisions about their care.³

EBP

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• “Rather than dictating a one-size-fits-all approach to patient care, clinical practice guidelines offer an evaluation of the quality of the relevant scientific literature and an assessment of the likely benefits and harms of a particular treatment¹.”

~Institute of Medicine

Why Clinical Practice Guidelines?

Page 8: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

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• Formulate the clinical question

Where do we start?

PPatient PopulationProblem

IInterventions

- Education- Self-care- Best practices

CComparison

- Current practice- Another intervention

O Outcome

Page 9: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

IM Injections: Aspirate or not?

P Adult patients

IAspirate when giving IM injection

C No aspiration

O Injury

Question:Among adult patients, does aspirating while giving an IM injection cause injury compared to no aspiration?

Page 10: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

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Search the literature

Page 11: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

Conducting a Search

Databases Databases

~ Cochrane ~ Google Scholar

~ AHRQ - NGC ~ Joanna Briggs

~ Pubmed ~ Virginia Henderson

~ CINAHL® International Nursing

~ ANA - Medline Library

~ AORN Journal ~ Embase

~ Medical Library

Page 12: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

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Types of evidence

Page 13: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

Appraise the evidenceAORN’s tools

Research Non-Research

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Evidence appraisal

The strength of the research evidence is indicated by I, II, or III for research and IV or V for non-research

The quality of the research evidence is indicated by A, B, or C

Page 15: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

Appraisal Score

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Quality is subjective

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Quality is the challenge

• Was there a clear explanation of the purpose of the study and, if so, what was it?

• Were there enough people in the study to establish that the findings did not occur by chance?

• How were variables defined?

• Were the instruments designed to measure a concept valid (did they measure what the researchers said they measured)?

• Were they reliable (did they measure a concept the same way every time they were used)?

Page 18: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

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• What statistics were used to determine if the purpose of the study was achieved?

• Did people leave the study and, if so, was there something special about them?

• Did the researchers base their work on a thorough literature review?

• Is the study purpose an important clinical issue?²

Quality

Page 19: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

AORN Evidence Rating Model

Appraisal ScoreEvidence Rating Evidence Requirements

Research Non-Research

IA  

IVA Regulatory

1: Strong Evidence1: Regulatory requirement

Interventions or activities for which effectiveness has been demonstrated by strong evidence from rigorously-designed studies, meta-analyses, or systematic reviews, rigorously-developed clinical practice guidelines, or regulatory requirements. Evidence from a meta-analysis or systematic review of research

studies that incorporated evidence appraisal and synthesis of the evidence in the analysis.

Supportive evidence from a single well-conducted randomized controlled trial.

Guidelines that are developed by a panel of experts, that derive from an explicit literature search methodology, and include evidence appraisal and synthesis of the evidence.

IBIIA, IIBIIIA, IIIB

IVBVA, VB

2: Moderate Evidence

Interventions or activities for which the evidence is less well established than for those listed under “1: Strong Evidence.” Supportive evidence from a well-conducted research study. Guidelines developed by a panel of experts which are primarily based

on the evidence but not supported by evidence appraisal and synthesis of the evidence.

Non-research evidence with consistent results and fairly definitive conclusions.

ICIICIIIC

IVCVC

3: Limited Evidence

Interventions or activities for which there are currently insufficient evidence or evidence of inadequate quality. Supportive evidence from a poorly conducted research study. Evidence from non-experimental studies with high potential for bias. Guidelines developed largely by consensus or expert opinion. Non-research evidence with insufficient evidence or inconsistent

results. Conflicting evidence, but where the preponderance of the evidence

supports the recommendation.

No requirement No requirement 4: Benefits Balanced With HarmsSelected interventions or activities for which the AORN Recommended Practices Advisory Board (RPAB) is of the opinion that the desirable effects of following this recommendation outweigh the harms.

No requirement No requirement 5: No EvidenceInterventions or activities for which no supportive evidence was found during the literature search completed for the recommendation. Consensus opinion.

Page 20: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

AORN Evidence Rating Model

1: Strong Evidence

1: Regulatory requirement

IA  

IVA Regulatory

1: Strong Evidence1: Regulatory requirement

Interventions or activities for which effectiveness has been demonstrated by strong evidence from rigorously-designed studies, meta-analyses, or systematic reviews, rigorously-developed clinical practice guidelines, or regulatory requirements. Evidence from a meta-analysis or systematic review of research

studies that incorporated evidence appraisal and synthesis of the evidence in the analysis.

Supportive evidence from a single well-conducted randomized controlled trial.

Guidelines that are developed by a panel of experts, that derive from an explicit literature search methodology, and include evidence appraisal and synthesis of the evidence.

Page 21: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

AORN Evidence Rating Model

2: Moderate Evidence

3: Limited Evidence

IBIIA, IIBIIIA, IIIB

IVBVA, VB

2: Moderate Evidence

Interventions or activities for which the evidence is less well established than for those listed under “1: Strong Evidence.” Supportive evidence from a well-conducted research study. Guidelines developed by a panel of experts which are primarily

based on the evidence but not supported by evidence appraisal and synthesis of the evidence.

Non-research evidence with consistent results and fairly definitive conclusions.

ICIICIIIC

IVCVC

3: Limited Evidence

Interventions or activities for which there are currently insufficient evidence or evidence of inadequate quality. Supportive evidence from a poorly conducted research study. Evidence from non-experimental studies with high potential for bias. Guidelines developed largely by consensus or expert opinion. Non-research evidence with insufficient evidence or inconsistent

results. Conflicting evidence, but where the preponderance of the evidence

supports the recommendation.

Page 22: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

AORN Evidence Rating Model

4: Benefits Balanced with Harms

5: No Evidence

No requirement No requirement 4: Benefits Balanced With HarmsSelected interventions or activities for which the AORN Recommended Practices Advisory Board (RPAB) is of the opinion that the desirable effects of following this recommendation outweigh the harms.

No requirement No requirement 5: No EvidenceInterventions or activities for which no supportive evidence was found during the literature search completed for the recommendation. Consensus opinion.

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Evidence synthesis

Page 24: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

Evidence Rating

[3: Limited Evidence]

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Public comment

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AORN Evidence Rated RP

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AORN Evidence Rated RP

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AORN EvidenceRated RP

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National Guideline Clearinghouse

National Guideline Clearinghouse™The National Guideline Clearinghouse™ (NGC), an AHRQ initiative, is a publicly available database of evidence-based clinical practice guidelines and related documents. Updated weekly with new content, the NGC provides physicians and other health professionals, health care providers, health plans, integrated delivery systems, purchasers, and others an accessible mechanism for obtaining objective, detailed information on clinical practice guidelines and to further their dissemination, implementation, and use.

Page 30: Evidence Based Practice and the Development of AORNs Recommended Practices Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP Director, Evidence-Based Perioperative.

Meeting NGC Criteria

• Documentation will need to be provided showing that the guideline is based upon a systematic review of the evidence.

• Documentation must contain an assessment of the benefits and harms of the recommended care and alternative care options.

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Compassion

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Questions

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References

1. Institute of Medicine. National Academy of Sciences, (2011). Clinical practice guidelines we can trust. Retrieved from IOM website: http://citationmachine.net/index2.php?reqstyleid=2&mode=form&reqsrcid=APAGovernmentReport&srcCode=9&more=yes&nameCnt=1

2. Fineout-Overholt, E., Melnyk, B., Stillwell, S., & Williamson, K. (2010). Evidence-based practice, step by step: Critical appraisal of the evidence part i. American Journal of Nursing, 110(7), 47-52.

3. Drisko, J. (2012, 0924). Social work resources: Evidence-based practice. Retrieved from http://sophia.smith.edu/~jdrisko/evidence_based_practice.htm