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Guidelines Recommandations. Role Ideal mediator for bridging between research findings and actual clinical practice Ideal tool for professionals, managers,

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Presentation on theme: "Guidelines Recommandations. Role Ideal mediator for bridging between research findings and actual clinical practice Ideal tool for professionals, managers,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Guidelines Recommandations

2 Role Ideal mediator for bridging between research findings and actual clinical practice Ideal tool for professionals, managers, authorities, policy makers

3 Methodology Should be evidenced-based But The methodological quality of many guidelines is modest and is heterogeneous between the different guidelines and different guidelines programmes

4 The AGREE collaboration = set of criteria for high-quality guidelines developed and validated by an international group of researchers and guidelines developers

5 Problems with guidelines (1) Lack of quality : “guidelines industry” not systematic, not rigorous, not based on the best evidence Lack of evidence : clear evidence only provided for a part of the proposed actions and decisions Translation of evidence into recommendations : clinical practice patients population more heterogeneous and complex than trials population. Issue to be taken into consideration.

6 Problems with guidelines (2) Interpretation of evidence : specific cultural and professional backgrounds Feasibility : acceptance by patients, resources, staff; skills, equipment … usually not considered Difficult implementation : success of guidelines implementation? Translation in care improvement?

7 Criteria for good-quality guidelines The AGREE instrument

8 The AGREE collaboration EU-funded research project Researchers and policy makers from 12 countries (UK, Ned, Dk, Fl, Fr, CH, Sp, Can, I, D, USA, New Zealand) Compilation of a comprehensive checklist of 82 items from existing instruments and relevant literature, reduced to 32 in 5 quality domains Tested in 100 guidelines from 11 countries

9 Final AGREE instrument 23 key items 6 domains, each intended to measure a separate dimension of guideline quality http://www.agreecollaboration.org Still based on theoretical assumptions tan on empirical evidence Future validation required to focus on how these elements interact in clinical practice in term of improved care and outcomes

10 Scope and purpose 1.The overall objective (s) of the guideline is (are) specifically described. 2.The clinical question (s) covered by the guideline is (are) specifically described. 3.The patients to whom the guidelines is meant to apply are specifically described.

11 Stakeholder involvement 4. The guidelines development group includes individuals from all relevant professional groups 5. The patients’ views and preferences have been sought 6. The target users of the guideline are clearly defined 7. The guideline has been piloted among target users

12 Rigour of development 8. Systematic methods were used to search for evidence 9. The criteria for selecting the evidence are clearly described 10. The methods for formulating the recommendations are clearly described (specify disagreement with reasons) 11. The health benefits, side effects and risks have been considered in formulating the recommendations 12. There is an explicit link between the recommendations and the supporting evidence 13. The guideline has been externally reviewed by experts prior to its publication 14. A procedure for updating the guideline is provided

13 Clarity and presentation 15. The recommendations are specific and unambiguous (language!) 16. The different options for management of the condition are clearly presented 17. Key recommendations are easy identifiable 18. The guideline is supported with tools for application

14 Applicability 19. The potential organisational barriers in applying the recommendations has been discussed 20. The potential cost implications of applying the recommendations have been considered 21. The guidelines present key review criteria for monitoring and/our audit purposes

15 Editorial independence 22. The guideline is editorially independent from the funding body 23. Conflict of interest of guideline development members have been recorded

16 Recommendations for guideline developers

17 People involved in guideline development Credible organisation responsible for guideline development Target users involved in guideline development (“ownership”) Balanced multidisciplinary guideline development group Patient involvement at any stage of the development process

18 Methodology of guideline development Systematic review of literature, including existing high-quality guidelines Combining evidence linkage and expert consensus in formulating recommendations External peer review Formal update procedure (every 3 years) Use of quality criteria for guidelines and guideline development

19 Dissemination and implementation strategy Production of different formats of the guideline, including patient versions, and tools for applications use of the Internet Multiple implementation strategies Review criteria, indicators for assessing the use of guidelines

20 References http://www.agreecollaboration.org R Grul, FA Cluseau, JS Burgers: Clinical practice guidelines: towards better quality guidelines and increased international collaboration. Br J Cancer 89 (Suppl 1): 54-58; 2003 USA: http://www.guideline.gov/index.asp


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