Transcript Chaptert 7
Dr Samira Alsenany
Knowledge must be translated into clinical practice to
improve patient care and outcomes
The understanding of care based on evidence is often far
removed from clinical practice
Developing an environment that fosters a culture of EBP
is key
Begin with a vision and an understanding of the goals to
be accomplished
An image of the future is created to begin the
transformation process
Often this vision is mandated
Regulatory bodies
Insurance providers
Magnet recognition
Begins with a few passionate individuals
Involvement of clinical experts and EBP mentors is key
Preparation and planning are essential
Sharing the vision for excellence in practice is the most
essential catalyst for promoting EBP
Engage
Clinical staff
Administrators
Members of other disciplines
Even when change is welcome, it is stressful
Stakeholder resistance to change must be explored early
Barriers to be addressed include
Inadequate knowledge and skills
Weak beliefs about the value of EBP
Poor attitudes toward EBP
Lack of EBP mentors
Social and organizational influences
Economic restrictions
Tell whether the following statement is true or false.
Implementation of EBP is the responsibility of graduateprepared nurses and members of the nursing leadership.
False
Rationale: Implementation of EBP in the clinical setting is
dependent on broad engagement and participation from
all care providers at all levels, as well as leaders,
administrators, and members of other disciplines.
What is the most effective strategy for engaging care
providers in a proposed EBP change?
a. Disseminate the evidence that underlies the change
b. Remind staff of their obligation to provide optimal care
c. Bring in EBP experts to speak to staff members
d. Organize discussions and meetings with EBP mentors
d. Organize discussions and meetings with EBP mentors
Rationale: Interactive discussions between EBP mentors
and care providers are an effective way to increase
knowledge and address attitudinal barriers. Other
strategies, such as bringing in outsiders to teach,
disseminating research findings, or telling caregivers that
they are obliged to change, are less likely to engage
them and foster genuine change.
Prioritize clinical issues
Evaluate the infrastructure
Start with a clinical issue of direct interest to
clinicians
Resources, time, and administrative support
Develop experts in the EBP process
Mentorship
Education alone will not change behavior
Establish formal implementation teams
Build excitement
Advanced practice and graduate-prepared nurses
Focus on the potential improvement in outcomes
Disseminate the evidence
Use active and engaging educational techniques
Develop clinical tools
Written guidelines, EBP summaries, pre-printed
orders, algorithms, prompts, and reminders
Pilot test the practice change
Preserve energy sources
Develop strategies to maintain excitement and
preserve energy resources
Choose a timeline carefully
Celebrate successes along the way
An important, yet often overlooked, step in EBP
Evaluation indicators
Outcome measures – quantifiable healthcare results
Quality care improvement
Quantify how interventions impact the quality of
patients’ and families’ lives
Patient-centered quality care
The value patients and families place on the
healthcare received
Efficiency of processes
Environmental changes
E.g., appropriate timing of interventions, effective
discharge planning, and efficient utilization of
hospital beds
E.g., evaluation of policy and procedure adherence,
unit resource availability, and healthcare professional
use of supplies and materials
Professional expertise
Establishing expectations for adherence to accepted
standards of care essential for best practice
Which of the following evaluation indicators can be
quantified and statistically analyzed?
a. Environmental changes
b. Professional expertise
c. Outcome measures
d. Patient-centered quality care
c. Outcome measures
Rationale: Outcome measures are quantifiable healthcare
results, such as health status, death, disability, iatrogenic
effects of treatment, health behaviors, and the economic
impact of therapy and illness management.
Environmental changes, professional expertise, and
patient-centered quality care are measures that equally
important, but which are more qualitative in nature.
An EBP environment promotes excellence in clinical care
resulting in improvement of patient outcomes
Transforming a healthcare institution into a setting where
an EBP culture exists requires persistence, patience,
and perseverance