Notes to authors |
• The SQUIRE guidelines provide a framework for reporting new knowledge about how to improve health care. |
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• The SQUIRE guidelines are intended for reports that describe system-level work to improve the quality, safety, and value of health care, and used methods to establish that observed outcomes were due to the intervention(s). |
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• A range of approaches exists for improving health care. SQUIRE may be adapted for reporting any of these. |
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• Authors should consider every SQUIRE item, but it may be inappropriate or unnecessary to include every SQUIRE element in a particular manuscript. |
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• The SQUIRE Glossary contains definitions of many of the key words in SQUIRE. |
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• The Explanation and Elaboration document provides specific examples of well-written SQUIRE items, and an in-depth explanation of each item. |
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• Please cite SQUIRE when it is used to write a manuscript. |
Title and Abstract |
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1. Title |
Indicate that the manuscript concerns an initiative to improve health care (broadly defined to include the quality, safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, cost, efficiency, and equity of health care) |
2. Abstract |
a. Provide adequate information to aid in searching and indexing |
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b. Summarize all key information from various sections of the text using the abstract format of the intended publication or a structured summary such as: background, local problem, methods, interventions, results, conclusions |
Introduction |
Why did you start? |
3. Problem Description |
Nature and significance of the local problem |
4. Available knowledge |
Summary of what is currently known about the problem, including relevant previous studies |
5. Rationale |
Informal or formal frameworks, models, concepts, and/or theories used to explain the problem, any reasons or assumptions that were used to develop the intervention(s), and reasons why the intervention(s) was expected to work |
6. Specific aims |
Purpose of the project and of this report |
Methods |
What did you do? |
7. Context |
Contextual elements considered important at the outset of introducing the intervention(s) |
8. Intervention(s) |
a. Description of the intervention(s) in sufficient detail that others could reproduce it |
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b. Specifics of the team involved in the work |
9. Study of the Intervention(s) |
a. Approach chosen for assessing the impact of the intervention(s) |
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b. Approach used to establish whether the observed outcomes were due to the intervention(s) |
10. Measures |
a. Measures chosen for studying processes and outcomes of the intervention(s), including rationale for choosing them, their operational definitions, and their validity and reliability |
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b. Description of the approach to the ongoing assessment of contextual elements that contributed to the success, failure, efficiency, and cost |
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c. Methods employed for assessing completeness and accuracy of data |
11. Analysis |
a. Qualitative and quantitative methods used to draw inferences from the data |
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b. Methods for understanding variation within the data, including the effects of time as a variable |
12. Ethical Considerations |
Ethical aspects of implementing and studying the intervention(s) and how they were addressed, including, but not limited to, formal ethics review and potential conflict(s) of interest |
Results |
What did you find? |
13. Results |
a. Initial steps of the intervention(s) and their evolution over time (eg, time line diagram, flowchart, or table), including modifications made to the intervention during the project |
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b. Details of the process measures and outcome |
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c. Contextual elements that interacted with the intervention(s) |
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d. Observed associations between outcomes, interventions, and relevant contextual elements |
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e. Unintended consequences such as unexpected benefits, problems, failures, or costs associated with the intervention(s) |
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f. Details about missing data |
Discussion |
What does it mean? |
14. Summary |
a. Key findings, including relevance to the rationale and specific aims |
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b. Particular strengths of the project |
15. Interpretation |
a. Nature of the association between the intervention(s) and the outcomes |
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b. Comparison of results with findings from other publications |
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c. Impact of the project on people and systems |
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d. Reasons for any differences between observed and anticipated outcomes, including the influence of context |
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e. Costs and strategic trade-offs, including opportunity costs |
16. Limitations |
a. Limits to the generalizability of the work |
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b. Factors that might have limited internal validity such as confounding, bias, or imprecision in the design, methods, measurement, or analysis |
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c. Efforts made to minimize and adjust for limitations |
17. Conclusions |
a. Usefulness of the work |
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b. Sustainability |
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c. Potential for spread to other contexts |
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d. Implications for practice and for further study in the field |
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e. Suggested next steps |
Other information |
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18. Funding |
Sources of funding that supported this work. Role, if any, of the funding organization in the design, implementation, interpretation, and reporting. |