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Process evaluation of a data-driven quality improvement program within a cluster randomised controlled trial to improve coronary heart disease management in Australian primary care

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-30, 05:43 authored by N Hafiz, K Hyun, Q Tu, A Knight, C Hespe, CK Chow, T Briffa, R Gallagher, CM Reid, DL Hare, N Zwar, M Woodward, S Jan, ER Atkins, TL Laba, Elizabeth HalcombElizabeth Halcomb, T Johnson, D Manandi, T Usherwood, J Redfern
Background This study evaluates primary care practices' engagement with various features of a quality improvement (QI) intervention for patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) in four Australian states. Methods Twenty-seven practices participated in the QI intervention from November 2019 -November 2020. A combination of surveys, semi-structured interviews and other materials within the QUality improvement in primary care to prevent hospitalisations and improve Effectiveness and efficiency of care for people Living with heart disease (QUEL) study were used in the process evaluation. Data were summarised using descriptive statistical and thematic analyses for 26 practices. Results Sixty-four practice team members and Primary Health Networks staff provided feedback, and nine of the 63 participants participated in the interviews. Seventy-eight percent (40/54) were either general practitioners or practice managers. Although 69% of the practices selfreported improvement in their management of heart disease, engagement with the intervention varied. Forty-two percent (11/26) of the practices attended five or more learning workshops, 69% (18/26) used Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles, and the median (Interquartile intervals) visits per practice to the online SharePoint site were 170 (146-252) visits. Qualitative data identified learning workshops and monthly feedback reports as the key features of the intervention. Conclusion Practice engagement in a multi-featured data-driven QI intervention was common, with learning workshops and monthly feedback reports identified as the most useful features. A better understanding of these features will help influence future implementation of similar interventions.

Funding

The Enhanced Advance care planning and life Review Longitudinal Intervention (EARLI) study: Increasing proactive care planning in Australian community aged care settings : National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) | APP2006283

QUality improvement in primary to prevent hospitalisations and improve Effectiveness and efficiency of care for people Living with heart disease (QUEL) : National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) | APP1140807

History

Journal title

PLoS ONE

Volume

19

Article/chapter number

ARTN e0298777

Total pages

19

Editors

Anandakumar Haldorai

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

Location

United States

Publication status

  • Published

Language

English

Associated Identifiers

grant.7876025 (dimensions-grant-id)