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Perceptions of changes in practice following peer review in the National Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Resources and Outcomes project

Perceptions of changes in practice following peer review in the National Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Resources and Outcomes project
Perceptions of changes in practice following peer review in the National Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Resources and Outcomes project
Purpose: the purpose of this paper is to examine perceptions of local service change and concepts of change amongst participants in a UK nationwide randomised controlled trial of informal, structured, reciprocated, multidisciplinary peer review with feedback to promote quality improvement: the National Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Resources and Outcomes Project (NCROP).

Design/methodology/approach: the paper takes the form of a qualitative study, involving semi?structured interviews with 43 hospital respiratory consultants, nurses and general managers at 24 intervention and 11 control NCROP sites. Thematic analysis resulted in adoption of Joss and Kogan's quality indicators as an analytic framework.

Findings: the paper finds that peer review was associated with positive changes, which may lead to sustained service improvement. Differences existed in perceptions of change among clinicians and between clinicians and managers. “Generic changes” (e.g. changes in interpersonal relations or cultural changes), were often not perceived as change.

Research limitations/implications: the study highlights the significance of generic change in evaluations of change processes. Most participants were clinicians limiting inter?professional comparisons. Some clinical staff failed to recognise changes they accomplished or their significance, perceiving change differently to others within their professional group. These findings have implications for policy and research. They should be considered when developing frameworks for assessing quality improvements and staff engagement with change.

Originality/value: this is the first qualitative study exploring participants' experience of peer review for quality improvement in healthcare. The study adds to previous research into UK health service improvement, which has had a more restricted focus on inter?professional differences
0952-6862
91-105
Rivas, Carol
040bfbc1-0aef-4826-ab58-e85743fea9d4
Taylor, Stephanie
094b43cd-73d8-4e26-b408-428c4806a177
Abbott, Stephen
bb811738-777d-4120-a2de-735021cab1f0
Clarke, Aileen
b305d25e-bf08-4344-8aee-f101d3d2df2e
Griffiths, Chris
bfeb2c27-a449-4c8c-a922-a774ac95b012
Roberts, C. Michael
d2eda008-73b8-407f-81f9-f508a2cc7faa
Stone, Robert
99c192c2-1254-4189-9617-5208c20f16d7
Rivas, Carol
040bfbc1-0aef-4826-ab58-e85743fea9d4
Taylor, Stephanie
094b43cd-73d8-4e26-b408-428c4806a177
Abbott, Stephen
bb811738-777d-4120-a2de-735021cab1f0
Clarke, Aileen
b305d25e-bf08-4344-8aee-f101d3d2df2e
Griffiths, Chris
bfeb2c27-a449-4c8c-a922-a774ac95b012
Roberts, C. Michael
d2eda008-73b8-407f-81f9-f508a2cc7faa
Stone, Robert
99c192c2-1254-4189-9617-5208c20f16d7

Rivas, Carol, Taylor, Stephanie, Abbott, Stephen, Clarke, Aileen, Griffiths, Chris, Roberts, C. Michael and Stone, Robert (2012) Perceptions of changes in practice following peer review in the National Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Resources and Outcomes project. International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance, 25 (2), 91-105. (doi:10.1108/09526861211198263). (PMID:22455175)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: the purpose of this paper is to examine perceptions of local service change and concepts of change amongst participants in a UK nationwide randomised controlled trial of informal, structured, reciprocated, multidisciplinary peer review with feedback to promote quality improvement: the National Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Resources and Outcomes Project (NCROP).

Design/methodology/approach: the paper takes the form of a qualitative study, involving semi?structured interviews with 43 hospital respiratory consultants, nurses and general managers at 24 intervention and 11 control NCROP sites. Thematic analysis resulted in adoption of Joss and Kogan's quality indicators as an analytic framework.

Findings: the paper finds that peer review was associated with positive changes, which may lead to sustained service improvement. Differences existed in perceptions of change among clinicians and between clinicians and managers. “Generic changes” (e.g. changes in interpersonal relations or cultural changes), were often not perceived as change.

Research limitations/implications: the study highlights the significance of generic change in evaluations of change processes. Most participants were clinicians limiting inter?professional comparisons. Some clinical staff failed to recognise changes they accomplished or their significance, perceiving change differently to others within their professional group. These findings have implications for policy and research. They should be considered when developing frameworks for assessing quality improvements and staff engagement with change.

Originality/value: this is the first qualitative study exploring participants' experience of peer review for quality improvement in healthcare. The study adds to previous research into UK health service improvement, which has had a more restricted focus on inter?professional differences

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 September 2010
Published date: 2012
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 378005
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378005
ISSN: 0952-6862
PURE UUID: d29fdf1b-8468-4147-8d08-e6034312924e

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Date deposited: 12 Jun 2015 14:35
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:14

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Contributors

Author: Carol Rivas
Author: Stephanie Taylor
Author: Stephen Abbott
Author: Aileen Clarke
Author: Chris Griffiths
Author: C. Michael Roberts
Author: Robert Stone

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