Optimizing practice guidelines through incorporating patient and family values and preferences
Optimizing practice guidelines through incorporating patient and family values and preferences
Neonatal care largely follows clinical practice guidelines and position statements developed locally by respective institutions as well as by national and international organizations. One might expect that adoption of clinical guidelines based on best available research evidence would make neonatal care practices mostly uniform. However, wide variation in clinical practice is still noted in neonatal care. Neonatal clinical guidelines are developed almost exclusively by healthcare professionals, with little or no input from families of the infants being cared for. Therefore, such variation in practice may stem not only from how the evidence is interpreted but also how caregivers and families value different outcomes that are affected by particular interventions. Acknowledging and incorporating the variability in patient and family values and preferences in clinical guidelines is an important step towards allowing shared decision making while reducing unwarranted practice variation, and thereby helping clinicians practice family-centered evidence-based medicine.
Clinical practice guidelines, GRADE, Quality improvement, Values and preferences
Mitra, Souvik
66762ff9-575c-49b3-bdf7-5b6a746d0164
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Johnston, Bradley C.
2df71bf6-2116-43bf-b2c2-ea6a16410add
2 April 2021
Mitra, Souvik
66762ff9-575c-49b3-bdf7-5b6a746d0164
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Johnston, Bradley C.
2df71bf6-2116-43bf-b2c2-ea6a16410add
Mitra, Souvik, Dorling, Jon and Johnston, Bradley C.
(2021)
Optimizing practice guidelines through incorporating patient and family values and preferences.
Seminars in Fetal and Neonatal Medicine, 26 (1), [101194].
(doi:10.1016/j.siny.2021.101194).
Abstract
Neonatal care largely follows clinical practice guidelines and position statements developed locally by respective institutions as well as by national and international organizations. One might expect that adoption of clinical guidelines based on best available research evidence would make neonatal care practices mostly uniform. However, wide variation in clinical practice is still noted in neonatal care. Neonatal clinical guidelines are developed almost exclusively by healthcare professionals, with little or no input from families of the infants being cared for. Therefore, such variation in practice may stem not only from how the evidence is interpreted but also how caregivers and families value different outcomes that are affected by particular interventions. Acknowledging and incorporating the variability in patient and family values and preferences in clinical guidelines is an important step towards allowing shared decision making while reducing unwarranted practice variation, and thereby helping clinicians practice family-centered evidence-based medicine.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 18 January 2021
Published date: 2 April 2021
Keywords:
Clinical practice guidelines, GRADE, Quality improvement, Values and preferences
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Local EPrints ID: 485125
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485125
ISSN: 1744-165X
PURE UUID: 0607316f-b289-41c9-9aa6-f60022a51ab6
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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2023 18:14
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:16
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Contributors
Author:
Souvik Mitra
Author:
Jon Dorling
Author:
Bradley C. Johnston
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