Abstract
This discussion paper describes a scoping exercise and literature review commissioned by the International Primary Care Respiratory Group (IPCRG) to inform their E-Quality programme which seeks to support small-scale educational projects to improve respiratory management in primary care. Our narrative review synthesises information from three sources: publications concerning the global context and health systems development; a literature search of Medline, CINAHL and Cochrane databases; and a series of eight interviews conducted with members of the IPCRG faculty. Educational interventions sit within complex healthcare, economic, and policy contexts. It is essential that any development project considers the local circumstances in terms of economic resources, political circumstances, organisation and administrative capacities, as well as the specific quality issue to be addressed. There is limited evidence (in terms of changed clinician behaviour and/or improved health outcomes) regarding the merits of different educational and quality improvement approaches. Features of educational interventions that were most likely to show some evidence of effectiveness included being carefully designed, multifaceted, engaged health professionals in their learning, provided ongoing support, were sensitive to local circumstances, and delivered in combination with other quality improvement strategies. To be effective, educational interventions must consider the complex healthcare systems within which they operate. The criteria for the IPCRG E-Quality awards thus require applicants not only to describe their proposed educational initiative but also to consider the practical and local barriers to successful implementation, and to propose a robust evaluation in terms of changed clinician behaviour or improved health outcomes.
Keywords: educational interventions, global health, IPCRG, primary care, quality improvement, respiratory care
Introduction
Respiratory and related respiratory allergic diseases are widely acknowledged as important global health issues.1 Diagnosis, treatment and care remain variable across different settings and countries. Primary care has a pivotal role in addressing the global challenge of non-communicable diseases including respiratory disease.2–4 Improving care by better implementation of guidelines has been identified by the International Primary Care Respiratory Group (IPCRG) as an important overarching theme in their Research Needs Statement.5,6
Educational interventions are often proposed as a strategy for improvement as n‘intuitively it would be assumed that training health professionals would enable them to acquire new skills and information and as a consequence patient outcomes would be improved’.7 Acquisition of knowledge, however, needs to be translated into behavioural change and ultimately improved patient outcomes.8
This discussion paper describes a scoping exercise and literature review commissioned by the IPCRG to inform their E-Quality programme, which seeks to support small-scale educational projects to improve quality of health outcomes for people with respiratory disease. The review addresses the merits of various educational and quality improvement approaches in improving outcomes in primary and respiratory care settings in order to inform evidence-based decisions about which projects to support. The diversity of their member countries and the broader global health agenda form an important context.
The scope of this review is broad and draws on diverse types of literature. We used three sources of material to inform the review: (1) publications concerning the global context and health systems development including empirical accounts of education and quality improvement work; (2) a literature search of Medline, CINAHL and Cochrane databases; and (3) a series of eight interviews conducted with members of the IPCRG faculty to explore the knowledge and experience of previous practice-based projects (see Box 1). The findings of the literature review and interviews were synthesised and themes were identified. We first report our findings related to the global healthcare context and then consider specific educational interventions and their potential to bring about change in clinical behaviour and improvement in patient outcomes.
Three sources of material which informed IPCRG scoping exercise and literature review.
Publications concerning the global context from organisations working and/or funding health development work were reviewed, including the Institute for Health Improvement (US); the King's Fund (UK); the Health Foundation (UK), the Nuffield Centre for Health & Development, Leeds University (UK), the World Bank Development Research Group, World Health Organization — Global Alliance Against Respiratory Disease (GARD)/Practical Approach to Lung Health (PAL)/Global Health Workers Alliance.
Medline, CINAHL, and Cochrane databases were searched for English language articles published between 2000 and 2010. The search terms used were ‘educational interventions’ or ‘continuing education’ with ‘primary care’ and ‘respiratory care’. Guidelines, study protocols, and accounts of patient education were excluded.
Interviews were conducted with eight key informants to explore the knowledge and experience of practice-based projects related to this field. Detailed notes were made of the interviews. The informants are IPCRG faculty from Australia, Pakistan, The Netherlands, Portugal, UK, and the USA actively involved in delivering educational interventions in East Africa, Asia (Bangladesh, China, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand/Laos, United Arab Emirates, Vietnam), across Europe, South America (Brazil), and the USA.
The Global Health Agenda
The IPCRG sits within a broader global health community which has considered the role of education in strengthening health systems and improving health outcomes. Education has an important role to play, but a number of critical issues are apparent.
Variations in healthcare systems
It is widely acknowledged that there is significant variation in the strength of health systems.9 We draw on a definition provided by Roberts et al. which suggests that a ‘health system’ includes ‘all those who deliver care — public or private’, ‘the money flows that finance such care’, ‘the activities of those who provide specialised inputs into the health care process’, ‘financial intermediaries, planners and regulators’, and the ‘activities of organisations who deliver preventative services’.10 To address variation there has been significant investment in strengthening health systems globally,11 although many challenges remain.
Roberts et al. suggest that strategic health reforms designed to improve health systems should start by defining issues in terms of performance deficiencies, followed by causal diagnosis and policy development.10 These principles reflect widely adopted quality improvement approaches developed by the Institute for Health Improvement.12,13 Education and development may be an important strategy in changing clinician/team behaviours and achieving improved outcomes, but there are other determinants of health systems' performance such as financing, payments (or other incentives), organisation/service redesign or regulation.10 For example, a recent Cochrane review has explored ‘payments for performance’ as an intervention designed to achieve healthcare actions or targets in low and middle income countries.14 Schoen et al. recently identified poor coordination of care for patients with complex health needs across 11 countries.15 System redesign, payment innovation, information systems, improved coordination of care between providers, and engagement of patients in management of their care are all cited as potential components of a solution.15
It is therefore essential that, in designing and supporting any health system development (and we infer here any educational intervention), attention is given to understanding the issue to be addressed and the local circumstances in terms of economic resources, political circumstances, organisation, and administrative capacities. Educational interventions supported by the IPCRG will need to demonstrate sensitivity to the diverse local, regional, and national contexts in which they may take place. This conclusion resonated with the experience of the IPCRG interviewees (Box 2).
IPCRG faculty perspectives on working with local circumstances and culture.
One respondent with experience of developing educational programmes in different regions commented: “There are in fact a myriad of local issues — awareness of doctors and/or patients and/or the community, competing pressures, alternative therapies, cost, access to education, time pressure from practice; how much time does the doctor have to explore new ways of doing things?”
Another respondent related how he had been involved in an educational project in Thailand/Laos which was not as successful as the team anticipated. Local participants were unwilling to question or challenge tutors as this was culturally seen as unacceptable behaviour. The team had to consider: ‘In what way would it be acceptable for participants to question tutors?’ They adjusted their approach to allow more time for participants to adapt to a different teaching and learning approach.
A global vision for reforming healthcare education
Frenk et al. propose that the education of health professionals requires significant global reform to address fragmented and outdated curricula which, they argue, produces graduates ill-equipped for the current challenges facing health systems.16 They set out an ambitious vision for improving pre-service education which includes both ‘instructional’ reforms (concerning what and how people learn) and ‘institutional’ reforms (concerning where education sits within an organisation or health system).
The proposed reforms advocate a more complex conception of the education of health professionals, which includes the needs of individuals in their local context but also considers how educational interventions sit within broader (local and global) health educational practices and infrastructures. This is important in a number of ways and holds relevant messages for the IPCRG E-Quality initiative. ‘Instructional reforms’ are not only concerned with technical/clinical skills and knowledge but also with developing shared values and skills essential for leading transformational change. The proposed reforms also encourage a questioning of existing educational practices and how interventions relate and contribute to broader health systems development. This is a richer and more complex understanding of learning and development which provides the foundation for evolving health systems to meet, for example, the challenge of long-term conditions.16
Global sharing of learning
The Global Health Workforce Alliance has proposed a framework which sets out clear principles and strategies to support education and training for health system development. This includes proposals for education and training which address local needs and are embedded within the health systems, increasing equity and efficiencies of scale through innovation in curriculum design and delivery and enhancing quality through leadership and collaboration.17
Traditionally, such international development work has concentrated on poorer and under-served populations.18 However, although developed countries may have unparalleled access to new science, technologies and expertise, their well established health systems and complex infrastructure can prove inflexible and difficult to change.19 Developed countries can learn a great deal about health and healthcare services from countries who are working with fewer resources and may have higher levels of innovation,19 offering opportunities to share learning between developing and developed countries.
The global health and international development literature provided the ‘big picture’ and overarching strategy which helped us to understand some of the wider context and clarified some important principles and values which are reflected in the IPCRG E-Quality criteria. We now consider the merits of a range of specific educational interventions.
What educational interventions bring about clinical behaviour change and improve patient outcomes?
We found a range of literature concerning the merits of different educational approaches.20,21 A critical issue is the link between knowledge and practice — what health professionals know and what they do; health professionals' knowledge does not necessarily translate into practice. Lack of high quality medical advice may be the result of a combination of low competence, poor individual motivation set in a healthcare context which is not conducive to improvement.22 Observations from the IPCRG faculty which complement the literature review are given in Box 3.
IPCRG perspectives on educational interventions.
On guidelines
“These [guidelines] are worthy documents but they don't get read or used by clinicians, the reason being the nature of the patient/doctor consultation in general practice.” The respondent then gave several examples: consultations are time-limited, patients may bring multiple issues.
A local group of clinicians engaged in an ‘action research’ type project where they engaged with a set of guidelines and thought about their use locally. A small-scale evaluation of this approach suggested it resulted in changes to clinical practice.
On education and continuing medical education
“Basic educational principles are important. [Educational interventions] should be facilitated, due attention given to context, there should be some thought about learning styles, learning should be re-enforced …”
“The most common educational intervention [we use] is a live lecture; we can reach a wide audience. We recorded a CD [to disseminate], but it lost some of its charm as it wasn't live.” The respondent explained the CD was designed to reach a wider audience who were not able to attend a lecture series by an allergy specialist (one of only three covering a wide geographical region).
On educational outreach and local opinion leaders
“Having the right mentors [for educational programmes] is crucial … [someone] who engages in a non-judgmental way and who works with the issues present in the country.”
On distance learning and online educational resources
“The use of technology may be varied given different geographical contexts and there is a need to contextualise learning materials as ‘off the shelf’ may not be helpful.”
“Nothing works in isolation. Some [online] materials are passive and we found we needed to develop [multi-faceted] interactive, real time interventions.”
On multi-faceted interventions
One respondent described accredited educational programmes which use a combination of online educational resources and interactive study days including facilitated small group work. Learning is assessed in practice to evidence change in practice.
Another respondent described a programme in which participants explore evidence-based medicine in the context of their own practice using a range of methods including simulation, vignettes, and video scenarios.
Education and continuing medical education
Education — including face-to-face teaching in small groups, seminars, interactive discussion or lectures — is often based on the premise of ‘transferring knowledge to practising professionals with an aim to change their practice’.23 Educational meetings alone, however, are unlikely to be effective in changing complex behaviours of healthcare professionals.24 Rigorous evaluation of standardised educational interventions are uncommon,25 and a systematic review of the effectiveness of continuing medical education (principally small group interactive seminars for general practitioners) in improving outcomes for patients with asthma was inconclusive.26
In contrast, a recent trial has shown that multifaceted educational programmes (or ‘blended learning’) which is sensitive to local circumstances and designed to build clinicians' sense of importance about change (‘why’) as well as their confidence to achieve change (‘how’) can reduce antibiotic prescriptions in primary care.27
Audit and feedback
Similarly, educational interventions may be more effective in improving professional practice and healthcare outcomes in combination with strategies such as audit and feedback, although the effects are variable28 and the benefits likely to be small in scale.24 Clinical audit in the context of diagnostic care provided to patients suspected of tuberculosis in a resource-poor setting was effective in improving quality when integrated with other health improvement programmes.29,30
Examples in the context of primary care management of respiratory conditions include a case study of audit and education which reduced technical errors in the performance of spirometry (and subsequent referrals) in a single general practice.31 Similarly, audit and feedback in the context of practice development plans produced improvements in the management of acute asthma.32 Audit and practice development underpins the Primary Care Respiratory Society UK's Quality Practice Award.33
Educational outreach and local opinion leaders
Educational outreach, defined as a ‘visit by a trained person to a health professional in his/her own setting’ in order to influence professional practice23 has been demonstrated to be an effective strategy to achieve small changes in practice;23,34 for example, in changing prescribing behaviours in primary care.35 Local opinion leaders are health professionals recognised by peers as ‘educationally influential’ who can, through education or supervision, influence the clinical behaviour of colleagues.23 One of the difficulties with this strategy is that it can prove difficult to identify effective local opinion leaders.35 Interventions are generally small scale and potentially use a disproportionate amount of resources.
Distance learning and online educational resources
Typically, distance learning is concerned with programmes and resources for learners who are not physically present in an educational setting. Learners, teachers/specialists with expertise, and educational materials may be separated by location and/or time differences. There is wide variation in the modes of distance learning and online educational resources available. At a simple level, educational materials may include printed and/or audio visual materials concerned with knowledge transfer and likely to be limited in changing professional behaviour.36
There are increasing numbers of technology-based educational resources. The advantages are that they allow easy access and flexibility, with the potential to train large numbers of participants. However, there are constraints and recognised barriers to e-learning for health professionals including cost, poor design of packages, inadequate technology, lack of skills, the need for a component of face-to-face teaching, the time-intensive nature of e-learning, and ‘computer anxiety’.37 Gensichen et al. used consensus methodology to study the potential of e-learning to provide effective education in general practice and concluded that, although there was a positive attitude to e-learning, there were concerns about the lack of alignment towards users' needs and the poor development of innovative didactic concepts.38
By their nature, many e-learning initiatives are accessed by individuals from diverse healthcare practices so that the educational design may lack attention to specific local contexts, educational support/facilitation may be limited and outcomes difficult to assess. A further practical limitation is their reliance on technology and internet access which may be an issue in resource-poor countries.
Reflecting earlier evidence on the benefits of multifaceted interventions,23,35 distance learning and online educational resources may be more likely to influence change in combination with other interactive strategies. For example, a multifaceted spirometry educational programme combining computer-based training with case-based learning supported by clinical experts using interactive webinars and a period of online ‘over reading’ and feedback has been shown to increase spirometry quality and assessment of asthma severity.39
Limitations
We did not undertake a systematic review, preferring to scope a very broad literature from which we were able to identify some consistent messages. The literature in this area is vast and diverse. We may have missed some important papers but, to reduce the risk of overlooking any key themes, we interviewed key members of the IPCRG with academic and practical experience of delivering educational programmes.
Conclusions
There is little evidence for the effectiveness of particular educational interventions either in changing health professional practice or, more significantly, in improving health outcomes as particularly the long-term effects of education on clinical practice have scarcely been studied. Too often the focus is on the process by which education is delivered rather than the outcome that is achieved for the person or persons to whom healthcare is delivered.40,41 This is not to belittle or denigrate educational initiatives but rather to encourage more rigorous thinking about the way that programmes are implemented and evaluated.
Educational interventions sit within complex healthcare, economic, and policy contexts42 and evaluations that seek to test specific approaches to education show equivocal results.43 We found some evidence of effectiveness amongst educational interventions that were carefully designed, multifaceted, engaged health professionals in their learning, provided ongoing support, were sensitive to local circumstances, and delivered in combination with other quality improvement strategies or incentives. The IPCRG therefore reflected these findings and this complex environment when designing the criteria for its E-Quality awards, requiring applicants to explain their healthcare context and consider the practical and local barriers when constructing their application (see E-Quality criteria in Box 4). A core requirement of E-Quality projects is to evaluate the intervention in terms of evidence of changed clinician behaviour and (ideally) improved health outcomes. Publication of their results over the forthcoming years should add to the literature on the merits of various educational and quality improvement approaches in improving outcomes in primary and respiratory care settings.
Quality criteria of the IPCRG E-Quality programme.
The E-Quality programme stipulates:
Clear problem definition in relation to IPCRG including a justification for the project
Consideration of the context for change
An explicit educational or quality improvement approach
Measurement of effectiveness of education on clinical practice outcomes
A consideration of how the intervention complements existing educational practices and culture
Clarity about how the intervention sits within the wider education system
Consideration regarding sustainability
Identification of project team and key stakeholders and collaborative relationships
The role of information communication technologies (ICT)
Management arrangements including incentives
Evaluation
Acknowledgments
Handling editor Anthony D'Urzo
Funding The IPCRG commissioned this work as part of the IPCRG e-Quality initiative. HP is supported by a Primary Care Research Career Award from the Chief Scientist's Office of the Scottish Government.
The authors would like to acknowledge the contribution of Professor Phillip Cotton to the scoping exercise, and members of the IPCRG Education Sub-committee who led the E-Quality award including Samantha Louw for administrative assistance.
Footnotes
NHC, JCdeS, OMY and HP are Associate Editors of the PCRJ, but were not involved in the editorial review of, nor the decision to publish, this article. The authors have no conflicts of interest in relation to this article
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