Partnership working in the production of clinical guidelines
Partnership working in the production of clinical guidelines
This article describes a working partnership between the Cairns Clinical Librarian Service, Health Care Libraries, University of Oxford and the Emergency Department (ED) at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford. This collaboration resulted in the establishment of a guideline development group in June 2002. The aim of the group is to produce a set of easily accessible, user-orientated, evidence-based guidelines for the use of clinicians in the Emergency Department, within a realistic timescale. The Cairns Clinical Librarian Project was built on previous models of clinical librarianship and incorporated an evaluation of previous programmes. The objective was to provide information to clinicians at the time and point of need. Consultation with the ED from the outset determined the approach adopted by the Cairns team. Clinical guidelines have been shown to improve clinical practice. Pending the introduction of nationally available protocols, we have begun to establish a collection of evidence-based guidelines using web-based architecture in conjunction with the Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals NHS Trust's IT department. A piece of diagnostic analysis was undertaken to ensure a coherent strategy was developed for the guideline project. An 'intermediate approach' was adopted, where existing valid guidelines were modified to fit local circumstances. We strove to be transparent at all times about all aspects of the guideline development process. Formative evaluation has shown how the application of evidence-based health care needs adequate resources and requires people with appropriate knowledge and skills. This article charts the progress of the project and highlights how the partnership between the clinical team and the Clinical Librarian has been deemed to be essential to the success of the project.
Cooperative Behavior, Emergency Service, Hospital, England, Evidence-Based Medicine, Hospitals, University, Humans, Interdepartmental Relations, Librarians, Libraries, Hospital, Patient Care Team, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Program Development, State Medicine, Journal Article
46-51
Keating, Liza
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Carter, Helen
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Darwent, Melanie
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Bateman, Sally
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Mackay, Donald M
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Pullinger, Rick
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June 2004
Keating, Liza
a1c5f887-6f5d-4caa-b6d1-e1ebc5d3f507
Carter, Helen
52143c9f-ea18-4872-8792-46e4385d799f
Darwent, Melanie
5a4f0e8d-12a8-47ba-92aa-562fe6561cf6
Bateman, Sally
97e1b489-f91c-4151-a05a-2a3204b83bf9
Mackay, Donald M
fd24e7f7-8774-455b-811f-e26e954a8f65
Pullinger, Rick
1b72b728-534e-4cb4-97d8-cedb5934ce7b
Keating, Liza, Carter, Helen, Darwent, Melanie, Bateman, Sally, Mackay, Donald M and Pullinger, Rick
(2004)
Partnership working in the production of clinical guidelines.
Health Information and Libraries Journal, 21 (S1), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1740-3324.2004.00495.x).
Abstract
This article describes a working partnership between the Cairns Clinical Librarian Service, Health Care Libraries, University of Oxford and the Emergency Department (ED) at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford. This collaboration resulted in the establishment of a guideline development group in June 2002. The aim of the group is to produce a set of easily accessible, user-orientated, evidence-based guidelines for the use of clinicians in the Emergency Department, within a realistic timescale. The Cairns Clinical Librarian Project was built on previous models of clinical librarianship and incorporated an evaluation of previous programmes. The objective was to provide information to clinicians at the time and point of need. Consultation with the ED from the outset determined the approach adopted by the Cairns team. Clinical guidelines have been shown to improve clinical practice. Pending the introduction of nationally available protocols, we have begun to establish a collection of evidence-based guidelines using web-based architecture in conjunction with the Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals NHS Trust's IT department. A piece of diagnostic analysis was undertaken to ensure a coherent strategy was developed for the guideline project. An 'intermediate approach' was adopted, where existing valid guidelines were modified to fit local circumstances. We strove to be transparent at all times about all aspects of the guideline development process. Formative evaluation has shown how the application of evidence-based health care needs adequate resources and requires people with appropriate knowledge and skills. This article charts the progress of the project and highlights how the partnership between the clinical team and the Clinical Librarian has been deemed to be essential to the success of the project.
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More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 May 2004
Published date: June 2004
Keywords:
Cooperative Behavior, Emergency Service, Hospital, England, Evidence-Based Medicine, Hospitals, University, Humans, Interdepartmental Relations, Librarians, Libraries, Hospital, Patient Care Team, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Program Development, State Medicine, Journal Article
Organisations:
FOS - Medicine
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 410854
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/410854
ISSN: 1471-1834
PURE UUID: 76464698-149b-4f78-84b3-c425efc62275
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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2017 09:46
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:03
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Contributors
Author:
Liza Keating
Author:
Helen Carter
Author:
Melanie Darwent
Author:
Sally Bateman
Author:
Donald M Mackay
Author:
Rick Pullinger
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