In search of controlled evidence for health care quality improvement

被引:14
作者
Balas, EA
Stockham, MG
Mitchell, JA
Sievert, ME
Ewigman, BG
Boren, SA
机构
[1] Prog. in Health Services Management, University of Missouri-Columbia, 324 Clark Hall, Columbia
[2] Medical Informatics Group, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia
[3] Sch. of Lib./Informational Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia
[4] Family and Community Medicine, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia
关键词
Health Services Research; MEDLINE; quality assurance; health care; randomized controlled trials;
D O I
10.1023/A:1022887224126
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
The purpose of this study was to measure the efficiency of simple searches in retrieving controlled evidence about specific primary health care quality improvement interventions and their effects. Searches were conducted to retrieve evidence on seven interventions and seven effect variables. Specific words and the closest Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) recommended by professional librarians were used to search the MEDLINE database. Searches were restricted to the MeSH publication type ''randomized controlled trial.'' Two reviewers independently judged retrieved citations for relevancy to the selected interventions and effects. In selecting MeSH terms, the average agreement among librarians was 64.3% (+/- 26.1) for interventions and 57.1% (+/-19.9) for effects. Analysis of the 755 retrieved reports showed that MeSH term searches had an overall recall rate of 58% while the same rate for textword searches was significantly lower (11%, p <.001). The difference in overall precision rates was nonsignificant (26% versus 33%, p In the group of MeSH searches, overall precision and recall was significantly lower for effects than for interventions (12% versus 52%, p <.001 and 41% versus 69%, p <.001). Two textwords appeared in more than 25% of the benchmark collection: reminder (25.7%) and cost (25.0%). The results of this study indicate that information needs for health care quality improvement cannot be met by simple literature searches. Certain MeSH terms and combinations of textwords yield moderately efficient recall and precision in literature searches for health care quality improvement. Clinicians and physician executives gaining direct access to bibliographic database could probably be better sewed by structured indexing of critical aspects of randomized controlled clinical trials: design, sample, interventions, and effects.
引用
收藏
页码:21 / 32
页数:12
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   THE COLUMBIA REGISTRY OF INFORMATION AND UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT TRIALS [J].
BALAS, EA ;
STOCKHAM, MG ;
MITCHELL, JA ;
AUSTIN, SM ;
WEST, DA ;
EWIGMAN, BG .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL INFORMATICS ASSOCIATION, 1995, 2 (05) :307-315
[2]  
BALAS EA, 1995, BEHAV MED, P461
[3]   THE RETRIEVAL OF RANDOMIZED CLINICAL-TRIALS IN LIVER-DISEASES FROM THE MEDICAL LITERATURE - MANUAL VERSUS MEDLARS SEARCHES [J].
BERNSTEIN, F .
CONTROLLED CLINICAL TRIALS, 1988, 9 (01) :23-31
[4]   CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT AS AN IDEAL IN HEALTH-CARE [J].
BERWICK, DM .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1989, 320 (01) :53-56
[5]   A COEFFICIENT OF AGREEMENT FOR NOMINAL SCALES [J].
COHEN, J .
EDUCATIONAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL MEASUREMENT, 1960, 20 (01) :37-46
[6]   SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS - IDENTIFYING RELEVANT STUDIES FOR SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS [J].
DICKERSIN, K ;
SCHERER, R ;
LEFEBVRE, C .
BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1994, 309 (6964) :1286-1291
[7]   FACTORS INFLUENCING PUBLICATION OF RESEARCH RESULTS - FOLLOW-UP OF APPLICATIONS SUBMITTED TO 2 INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARDS [J].
DICKERSIN, K ;
MIN, YI ;
MEINERT, CL .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1992, 267 (03) :374-378
[8]   PERUSING THE LITERATURE - COMPARISON OF MEDLINE SEARCHING WITH A PERINATAL TRIALS DATABASE [J].
DICKERSIN, K ;
HEWITT, P ;
MUTCH, L ;
CHALMERS, I ;
CHALMERS, TC .
CONTROLLED CLINICAL TRIALS, 1985, 6 (04) :306-317
[9]  
Friedman LM, 1985, FUNDAMENTALS CLIN TR
[10]  
FUNK ME, 1983, B MED LIBR ASSOC, V71, P176