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Evidence Based Practice

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Evidence Based Practice Steven R. Pruett, Ph.D, CRC SERNRA Conference May 18, 2005 Evidence-Based Practice Since the passage of the HMO Act of 1973, there have been ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evidence Based Practice


1
Evidence Based Practice
  • Steven R. Pruett, Ph.D, CRC
  • SERNRA Conference
  • May 18, 2005

2
Evidence-Based Practice
  • Since the passage of the HMO Act of 1973, there
    have been many changes in the American healthcare
    system.
  • Consumer-driven
  • Market-based
  • Customer choice
  • Customer satisfaction
  • Health outcomes

3
Evidence-Based Practice
  • Rehabilitation Healthcare systems, researchers,
    practitioners and other stakeholders need to
    provide evidence to support the effectiveness of
    services.
  • Particularly relevant in rehabilitation has has
    given rise to the emphasis on consumerism,
    consumer involvement, and program evaluation.

4
Evidence-Based Practice
  • One of the ways healthcare providers have
    responded to these managed care system demands is
    through evidence-based practice.

5
Definitions
  • Rosenberg and Donald (1996) defined
    evidence-based medicine as a process of turning
    clinical problems into questions and then
    systematically locating, appraising, and using
    contemporaneous research findings as the basis
    for clinical decisions.
  • Sackett, Rosenberg, Gray, Haynes, and Richardson
    (1996) described evidence-based practice as the
    conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of
    current best evidence in making decisions about
    the care of individual patients.

6
Definitions
  • DePalma (2000) further refined the definition of
    evidence-based practice as a complete process
    beginning with knowing what clinical questions to
    ask, how to find the best practice, and how to
    critically appraise the evidence for validity and
    applicability to the particular care situation.
    The best evidence then must be applied by a
    clinician with expertise in considering the
    patient's unique values and needs. The final
    aspect of the process is evaluation of the
    effectiveness of care and the continual
    improvement of the process.
  • Ottenbacher and Mass (1998) indicated that the
    best evidence used to support evidence-based
    practice is derived from a series of research
    studies results in an empirical consensus
    regarding the effectiveness of a treatment
    approach.

7
Evidence-Based Practice Rehab Case Management
  • Limited empirical support for rehab case mgt
    interventions.
  • Central focus of this service is to evaluate,
    managed coordinate services for PWDs
    (Chronister, da Silva Cardoso, Lee, Chan
    Leahy, 2005)
  • Medical Case Mgt assesses, plans, implements
    coordinates, monitors evaluates options and
    services to meet individuals health needs
    through communication and available resources to
    promote quality cost-effective outcomes.
    (Mullahy, 1995)
  • Voc case mgt is the movement of a client through
    the rehab process includes the mgt and
    coordination of all services needed to achieve
    successfully the rehab goal.
  • (Cox, Connolly Flynn, 1981)

8
Evidence-Based Practice Rehab Case Management
  • Socase management emphasizes
  • Evaluation
  • Outcomes
  • Quality assurance
  • Thereforecase managers are already working, in
    part, as evidence-based practitioners without
    explicitly recognizing it.

9
Rehab and Evidence-Based Practice
  • Quality Assurance standards of practice
  • Case Management Society of America
  • Individual Case Management Assoc Aetna Health
    Plan developed Case Management Practice
    Guidelines.
  • CRCC code of professional ethics.
  • Decision-making process
  • Evaluation needs to be based on credible
    scientific evidence versus subjective experience.

10
Rehab and Evidence-Based Practice
  • Rehabilitation researchers must conduct
    systematic research to demonstrate the
    effectiveness of rehabilitation counseling/case
    management interventions.
  • RCs/case managers must be able to assist clients
    in selecting the most appropriate medical,
    psychological, educational, social and vocational
    interventions for a clients particular
    situation.

11
Rehab and Evidence-Based Practice
  • To better practice evidence-based rehabilitation
    RC/case managers must have the following
    knowledge
  • Research design
  • Statistics
  • How to access pertinent research

12
Evidence-Based PracticeGeneral Concepts
  • Gold standard of best practice in medicine
  • In medicine, with its positivist scientific
    methods tradition, the gold standard for
    scientific evidence is still randomized clinical
    trials and the method of choice for determining
    the cumulative evidence of the effectiveness of a
    treatment is meta-analysis.
  • Randomized clinical trials
  • Meta-analysis

13
Evidence Based Practice
  • Steps for the evidence-based practice of medicine
    by practitioners
  • Formulate a clear clinical question from a
    patient's problem.
  • Search the literature for relevant clinical
    articles.
  • Evaluate (critically appraise) the evidence for
    its validity and usefulness.
  • Implement useful findings in clinical practice.
  • (Rosenberg Donald, 1996)

14
Evidence-based PracticeSome Rehab Questions
  • What processes/techniques make a specific
    rehabilitation intervention work?
  • For whom is the intervention most effective?
  • Are certain interventions/programs better for
    certain populations?
  • Who should receive a specific intervention or
    program? When? And for how long?

15
A Hierarchy of Levels of Best Evidence
  • Level 1 evidence is defined as strong evidence
    from at least one systematic review of multiple
    well-designed randomized controlled trials.
  • Level 2 evidence is defined as strong evidence
    from at least one properly designed randomized
    controlled trial of appropriate size.
  • Level 3 evidence is defined as evidence from
    well-designed trials without randomization,
    single group pre-post, cohort, time series, or
    matched case-controlled studies.

16
A Hierarchy of Levels of Best Evidence
  • Level 4 evidence is defined as evidence from
    well-designed non-experimental studies from more
    than one center or research group.
  • Level 5 evidence is defined as opinions of
    respected authorities, based on clinical
    evidence, descriptive studies, or reports of
    expert committees.

17
Related Concepts Empirically Supported Treatment
  • APA Division 12 defined empirically supported
    treatment (EST) as clearly identified
    psychological treatments shown to be efficacious
    in controlled research studies with a delineated
    population.
  • EST should be evaluated in terms of efficacy
    (statistical and clinical significance),
    effectiveness (clinical utility), and efficiency
    (cost-effectiveness).

18
Related Concepts Empirically Supported Treatment
  • Patterned after the FDA guidelines for approval
    of new drugs, the APA Div 12 Task Force on the
    Promotion and Dissemination of Psychological
    Procedures established two criteria for
    establishing the empirical validity of a
    psychotherapeutic approach
  • The approach is superior to a placebo or other
    treatment or
  • The approach is equal to an established
    treatment, in at least two studies established by
    different investigators.

19
Related Concepts Meta-Analysis
  • Meta-analysis is a method used to review research
    literature based on statistical integration and
    analysis of research findings.
  • In treatment effectiveness meta-analysis, the
    dependent variable is the effect size (i.e., the
    outcomes or results of each study selected for
    review transformed into a common metric across
    studies) and the independent variables are study
    characteristics (i.e., participants,
    interventions, and outcome measures).

20
Related Concepts Meta-Analysis
  • Meta-analysis is an effort to review the results
    of a research domain in quantitative terms. The
    intent is to identify what significant
    relationships exist between study features
    (independent variables) and effect sizes
    (dependent variable).
  • Benefits The benefits of meta-analysis include
    its ability to
  • Synthesize the results from many studies
    succinctly and intuitively for nonscientific
    communities,
  • Illustrate the amount and relative impact of
    different programs on different criteria for
    policy decision-making purposes, and
  • Identify the most effective programs and
    highlight gaps or limitations in the literature
    to suggest directions for future research

21
Related Concepts Meta-Analysis
  • A common index of the size of the effect produced
    by each study is the effect size index g, which
    is the standardized difference between the sample
    mean of the treatment group and the sample mean
    of the control group (Wampold, 2001). A positive
    score indicates that the treatment group
    outperformed the control group, and a negative
    score has the reverse meaning. However, the
    effect size index g is a sample statistics. As
    such, it is a biased estimator of the true (i.e.,
    population) effect size.

22
Related Concepts Meta-Analysis
  • Hedges and Olkin (1985) provided the effect size
    index d as a good approximation of the unbiased
    estimator and the index d for aggregating the
    effect sizes across studies as estimate of
    population effect size. The unbiased effect size
    indexes d and d are commonly reported in
    meta-analytic studies.
  • Standardized Mean Difference Effect Size
  • large effect d .80
  • medium effect d .50
  • small effect d .20

23
Evidence-Based Practice Implications for Rehab
Counseling
  • Implications for counseling research The need
    for level 1 evidence (empirical supported
    treatment and meta-analysis) related to the
    effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions
    (individual ingredients/components of RC as well
    as RC as interventions)
  • Implications for practitioners For
    practitioners, evidence-based practice is a
    research utilization issue (ability to judge the
    quality of an individual research study and a
    collection of studies, the ability to select the
    best interventions on an individualized basis,
    and the ability to search for research
    information using the Internet and other library
    tools)

24
Resources for Evidence-Based Practice
  • Agency for Healthcare Policy and Research (AHRQ)
  • Title IX of Public Health Services Act
  • Healthcare Research and Quality Act of 1999
  • Primary agenda is to research health outcomes,
    develop effective outcome measures evaluate
    overall quality of care.
  • Patient Outcomes Research Teams (PORTs)
  • Clinical Practice Guidelines
  • Clinical performance measures
  • Report Cards

25
PORTs
  • Designed to determine the most effective
    treatment and pattern of care for a specified
    clinical area through lit reviews
    meta-analysis.
  • Partnership with National Institute of Health.
  • Some PORTs that are relevant to rehab
  • Effectiveness of alternative treatments for type
    II diabetes mental health problems in the
    Mexican-American population (funded in part by UT
    Health Science Center)
  • Secondary prevention of stroke, hip fx repair,
    osteoarthritis, TKR, back pain tx and assessment.

26
Clinical Practice Guidelines
  • Frequently developed from PORT findings
  • Offer healthcare providers well-founded,
    cost-effective treatment methods for various
    clinical conditions.
  • PORT study on Stroke Rehabilitation led to the
    clinical practice guideline Post-stroke
    Rehabilitation (AHRQ, 2000).
  • Development use of clinical practice guidelines
    has become so well accepted that AHRQ no longer
    sponsors development since many public private
    entities are doing this independently.
  • National Guideline Clearinghouse
    (www.guideline.gov)

27
Clinical Performance Measures
  • Used to assess services of a healthcare
    professional by reviewing
  • appropriateness of service
  • timeliness of service, and
  • access to service
  • Measures are detailed and condition specific
  • Attempts to measure quality of care.
  • Currently there are approximately 1,200
    performance measures
  • Are grouped by
  • Disease/condition
  • Treatment/intervention
  • Domain
  • Organization
  • Available at the National Quality Measures
    Clearinghouse (www.qualitymeasures.ahrq.gov)

28
Clinical Performance Measures
  • Measures developed by
  • Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
    Organizations
  • Health Plan Employers Data Information Set
  • Healthcare Cost Utilization Project
  • Outcome Assessment Information Set
  • The University of Wisconsin Nursing Home quality
    indicators.
  • VA external review program

29
Report Cards
  • Information obtained through these Clinical
    Performance Measures are frequently used for
    marketing and other communication purpose to
    consumers and other purchasers through Report
    Cards
  • Report Cards are a response to the
    consumer-driven healthcare system and provides
    consumers with information concerning the care
    recommended by clinical practice guidelines,
    outcomes expected under specific situations and
    the wide range of performance measures used to
    evaluate the quality different aspects of care
    offered in a user-friendly format.

30
Other resources
  • American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine
  • www.acrm.org/Resources/Evidence-BasedResources.htm

31
Research Issues
  • Rehabilitation research has identified important
    rehab counseling/case mgt functions and knowledge
    domains, BUT
  • As of this time, no empirical evidence has been
    generated that supports the effectiveness of
    these functions or knowledge domains on rehab
    outcomes.

32
Research Issues
  • It is possible to infer some evidence using
    research from allied disciplines (e.g.,
    counseling and clinical psychology)
  • For example the process variable of working
    alliance has gained overwhelmingly strong
    empirical evidence as a primary influence on
    counseling outcomes (Wampold, 2001).

33
Research Issues
  • There is some evidence for effectiveness of
    counseling factors in rehab counseling
  • Bolton and Akridges (1995) meta-analysis of 15
    experimental evaluations of 10 skills training
    interventions (e.g., social skills, stress mgt.,
    problem-solving skills, career decision-making
    skils) across some 61 outcome measures.
  • Estimated true effect size of .93 indicated
    skills training services substantially benefit
    the typical VR client.

34
Practice Issues
  • Rehab Counselors/case managers need to aware of
    contemporary research in rehab as well as in
    allied fields.
  • This will promote evidence-based practice and
    insure people with disabilities and chronic
    illnesses receive effective services.

35
Practice Issues
  • RC Masters education curricula has only one
    class in research methods
  • Probably the most unpopular course and
    unfortunately translates to negative attitudes
    towards using research.
  • Other problems to research utilization
  • Practicing counselors generally dont believe
    research results can translate into their work
  • Lack of time on the job
  • High cost of continuing education
  • Weak research analysis skills

36
Practice Issues
  • How to correct these problems
  • Rethink curricula regarding research
  • Need for more creative activities that promote
    working knowledge of manual and computer searches
  • Solid understanding of different research designs
    and issues related to power analysis, effect size
    and meta-analysi.
  • Regular in-service training within rehab work
    environments

37
Summary
  • Rehab is one of many health-related disciplines
    facing demands of a managed-care system.
  • Professionals in the social and behavioral
    sciences are having to rely on credible evidence
    to justify their interventions and maintain their
    identity in a climate of healthcare outcomes.

38
Summary
  • Evidence-based practice and empirically validated
    interventions dominate the healthcare research
    and are most likely here to stay.
  • How well rehabilitation researchers and
    practitioners work together to respond to the
    demands of this evidence-based climate is crucial
    for the professions viability.

39
Summary
  • Rehabilitation researchers need to conduct more
    experimental studies to validate the
    effectiveness of specific rehab counseling/case
    management interventions as well as to determine
    the overall effectiveness of rehab counseling and
    case management.
  • Rehabilitation educators need to focus on
    improving the quality and effectiveness of
    courses in research methods to facilitate
    evidence-based practitioners.

40
Summary
  • Rehabilitation students need to be able to
    understand a wide array of research designs and
    methodologies as well as access and critically
    evaluate research from rehab and related
    literature.
  • Work settings need to provide pre-service and
    in-service training regarding evidence-based
    practice and incorporate this type of service
    delivery into their job descriptions.

41
Summary
  • Evidence-based practice is the standard of
    practice in healthcare.
  • The extent to which rehabilitation
    counselors/case managers, researchers and
    educators prepare for and accept EBP will dictate
    the degree to which rehabilitation can be
    performed correctly and adequately by the
    professionals providing the service.
  • (Chronister et al., 2005)
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