Nursing Process in Prevention Evaluation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 49
About This Presentation
Title:

Nursing Process in Prevention Evaluation

Description:

Measuring the Effects of Nursing Practice on Client Outcome ... How do we carve out, measure & document nursing's contribution to health promotion outcomes? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:81
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 50
Provided by: mko1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Nursing Process in Prevention Evaluation


1
Nursing Process in Prevention - Evaluation
  • Week 8
  • Thanks to the collaborative team for this
    presentation

2
Factors Influencing Health Outcomes
  • Comprehensive complex
  • 4 main factors
  • Client
  • Provider of care
  • System characteristics
  • Process of delivering health promotion
    interventions.

3
Measuring the Effects of Nursing Practice on
Client Outcome
  • To determine the most appropriate, effective
    intervention
  • And the most cost effective interventions in
    current competitive health care market.

4
Improving Quality of Care
  • Evaluate the contribution of health care and
    health related interventions for individuals,
    families and community on outcomes.
  • Measure
  • Monitor
  • Manage outcomes.

5
Defining Health Outcomes?
  • Consequences of a treatment or intervention
    (goal) which is intended or unintended
  • Effects of interventions manifested by changes in
    any dimension of health or resolution of problem
    targeted by the intervention
  • Health promotion outcomes differ according to the
    structure of intervention as well as the process
    of implementing intervention.

6
Measuring Quality
  • Evaluate
  • Structure
  • Process
  • Health outcomes.

7
Measuring Quality (cont.)
  • Tools used to measure these called performance
    measures or indicators
  • Clients choice important when defining outcomes
    of health promotion interventions
  • Traditionally health outcomes included 5 Ds
    death, disease, disability, discomfort
    dissatisfaction - client subjective opinion use
    to be considered too vague unreliable, now very
    important.

8
Monitoring Managing
  • Outcomes monitoring Repeated observation,
    description quantification of outcome measures
  • Outcomes management data collected from
    measuring monitoring outcomes used to
    continuously improve nursing practice.
  • E.g. costs quality are continuously
    retrospectively measured examined to improve
    quality of care health status of clients.

9
Challenge
  • Nurses practice in a multidisciplinary
    environment how do we identify what health
    outcomes are nursing-sensitive, or those that are
    influenced by nursing activities?
  • How do we carve out, measure document nursings
    contribution to health promotion outcomes?
  • Need to differentiate dependent, independent
    interdependent nursing interventions to determine
    outcomes that nurses are accountable for.

10
ANA Identified Nurse-Sensitive Outcomes
  • Physiological
  • Psychosocial
  • Functional
  • Behavioural
  • Cognitive
  • Home functioning
  • Safety
  • Symptom control
  • Goal attainment
  • Satisfaction
  • Costs.

Table 10-1 Pender
11
Instruments
  • After identifying appropriate health promotion
    outcomes, accurate reliable instruments will
    have to be developed to measure these outcomes
  •  Although measures are available, many do not
    fully capture the effects of nursing practice.

12
Significance of Nursing-Sensitive Outcomes
  • Demonstrate nursing contributions to patient
    outcomes
  • Employers, consumers, health policy makers are
    asking nursing to identify which interventions
    are most effective (achieves goal) efficient
    (with least amount of time resources)
  • Enhances our visibility.

13
Deciding Which Health Outcomes to Measure
  • Depends on
  • Goals to be attained
  • The purpose type of intervention
  • The ability to access information needed to
    measure results of care
  • Challenge is to select health outcomes that are
    comprehensive, comparable, meaningful accurate
    in reflecting the effects of the health promotion
    intervention.

14
Outcomes Classification in Health care
  • Client focused
  • Diagnostic specific/Holistic
  • Provider focused
  • Health care provider/Family
  • Community focused.

15
Short-Term, Intermediate, Long-Term Outcomes
  • Timing of measurement of outcomes is critical to
    result obtained
  • Information collected too soon change in
    lifestyle may not be made
  • Information collected too late other factor may
    have intervened to influence expected results.

16
Short-term, Intermediate Long-term Outcomes
(cont.)
  • Short-term outcomes are measured immediately
    following the intervention
  • Intermediate outcomes are measured soon enough
    following the intervention so that its effects
    can be accurately isolated from other possible
    reasons
  • Long-term outcomes are the ultimate outcomes
    final or end results.

17
Economic Outcomes Types
  • Cost effectiveness What is the most inexpensive
    way to achieve a given outcome?
  • Cost utility What is the cost per
    quality-adjusted life years?
  • Cost benefit What is the net benefit of a given
    alternative?.

18
Developing a Plan to measure Health Outcomes
  • 4. ID potential factors that may influence
    outcomes clt characteristics, demographics,
    family characteristics
  • 5. Select outcomes to measure effects of
    intervention short term, intermediate,
    long-term.
  • 1. Select health protection/ promotion area of
    interest
  • 2. Identify most effective intervention for
    defined area.
  • 3. Tailor intervention to client

Table 10-3 Pender
19
Challenges in Measuring Health Outcomes
  • Separating the contribution of nursing from other
    health care providers
  • Sensitivity of measures of outcomes
  • Holistic-focused outcomes
  • Measurement of community or organizational
    focused outcomes.

20
Directions for Nursing Research in Outcome
Measurement
  • More explanatory studies to identify holistic
    outcomes that reflect nursings contribution to
    learn patient preferences
  • Experimental research needed to test health
    promotion interventions evaluate client
    outcomes at multiple points in time
  • Need sensitive measures of health promotion
    outcomes that reflect nursings influence  
  • Need measures of community-level outcomes
  • Need to learn how to measure economic outcomes.

21
Directions for Nursing Practice in Achieving
Health Outcomes
  • Nurses must focus on the value of their practice,
    delineate its contribution to health outcomes
  • Plans of care must be continually assessed to
    identify the most effective approaches for
    quality care
  • Nurses must keep up to date with the literature.

22
Evaluating Individual Community Interventions
23
Research
  • A scientific knowledge base to guide health
    promotion interventions is established by
    evaluating the accumulating results of research
    (Pender, p 276)
  • Our knowledge of the effectiveness of health
    promotion interventions is based on quality
    research that has been conducted and published
    (Pender, p 276).

24
Scientific Knowledge Base
  • The effectiveness of a particular intervention
    can only be assessed through careful examination
    of accumulated research evaluation evidence
    about the specific type of intervention
  • Knowledge base both guides health promotion
    interventions is established by evaluating the
    accumulated results of research on those HP
    interventions.

25
How to Evaluate Health Promotion Interventions?
  • Need to understand several components of
    evaluation first
  • Efficacy evaluation effectiveness evaluation of
    interventions
  • Process or Outcome Evaluation.

26
Efficacy or Effectiveness of Intervention
  • Efficacy - capacity or power to produce a desired
    effect in an ideal environment
  • Refers to improvements in health outcomes due to
    intervention achieved in research setting, under
    ideal circumstances by expert researchers
  • Demonstrate outcomes are due to intervention not
    to chance or other factors
  • Best demonstrated by randomized clinical trials.

27
Efficacy or Effectiveness of Intervention (cont.)
  • Effectiveness is the effect it achieves in the
    real world, with limited resources, in entire
    populations
  • Addresses the clinical usefulness in a typical
    setting
  • Have been called large sample trials or public
    health trials, as they are implemented on large
    populations are thought to have immediate
    effect on clinical practice.

28
Class exercise
29
Efficacy or Effectiveness of Intervention (cont.)
  • Both useful in developing testing interventions
  • Efficacy studies considered less generalizable,
    often used as first phase of study
  • Effectiveness studies follow - findings are
    applied to real-life settings for feasibility,
    cost utility, effectiveness acceptance of
    intervention by differing groups of clients
  • Nurses participating in research must implement
    protocols as faithfully as possible keep good
    records.

30
Process or Outcome Evaluation
  • Process Evaluation how the program was
    implemented, variations of delivery at different
    sites, quality of delivery, who received the
    intervention whether it was implemented as
    planned.
  • Provides information about intended or unintended
    outcome, target audience, client satisfaction
    (feedback loop important)
  • Outcome evaluation focus on the results intended
    unintended.

31
Class Exercise
32
Collecting Evidence for Practice
  • In current health care environment, cant rely
    solely on clinical experiences, tradition
    opinion-based processes to guide HP interventions
  • Must use current best practice evidence
  • Start by looking at research literature, must
    then critically evaluate synthesize evidence
    evidence based practice.

33
Evidenced Based Practice
  • Integration of clinical expertise with best
    available clinical research findings
  • From many sources synthesis of relevant
    research, international/national/local standards
    of practice, cost effective analysis, clinical
    expertise, client preferences
  • Aim is to ? wide variations in practice,
    eliminating worst practices, improving quality
    ? costs
  • Builds/expands research base.

34
STEPS IN EVIDENCE BASED PRACTICE (table 11-1) pg
266
  • Identify what evidence is needed
  • 1. Assess need for change in practice
  • Retrieve evaluate the evidence
  • 2. Conduct literature search
  • 3. Critically evaluate/appraise literature
  • Decide design what to implement
  • 4. Identify results applicable to practice
  • 5. Develop practice change to implement results
  • Implement
  • 6. Apply change to practice
  • Evaluate both process outcome evaln
  • 7. Evaluate outcomes of new change.

35
EBP - What it is what it is not.
  • Evidence based practice does not replace clinical
    expertise.
  • It is not a cookbook approach.
  • The use of EBP helps to plan systematically
    evaluate health promotion practices.

36
Evaluation of Interventions with Individuals
Communities
  • Levels and Types of Interventions

Upstream Public policy Environment Tax
incentives or deterrents, policy changes,
local ordinances, laws, media campaigns
Midstream Communities Work site programs School
programs Community based programs
Downstream Individuals Education/
Counseling Support
37
Challenge for health care professionals
reseachers
  • is to develop, test, evaluate, implement
    models of health promotion that incorporate the
    influences of community factors (work sites,
    schools, etc.), environmental factors,
    sociocultural factors with individual behaviors
    to promote wellness.

38
Evaluating Effective Evidence-Based Individual
Strategies
  • Effective strategies aimed at improving health of
    individuals that warrant continued use based on
    the evaluation results include
  • contests/ competitions to recruit/maintain
    participants
  • self help minimal but repeated contact programs
  • screening for health education case finding.

39
Evaluating Effective Evidence-Based Community
Strategies
  • Build on existing community structures
  • Target system where ind. lives works
  • Collaboration of ind. organizations, requires
    time money
  • E.g. Workplaces, churches, schools
  • Activation of community difficult - need to
    coordinate agencies - may not have same
    mandate/conflicting goals
  • Community ownership important
  • Media campaigns found useful.

40
For success in health promotion we need a balance
between individual community strategies.
41
Lessons learned from evaluation of HP
Interventions
  • Program components that facilitate success
    include
  • The design of the interventions
  • The selection of outcomes to measure
  • The time frame for implementing the intervention
    evaluating the results
  • Maintaining behaviour change also reviewed.

42
Designing the intervention
  • Assess appropriateness for target populations
  • Should be evidence to show intervention works on
    this targeted setting population before
    beginning
  • Has to be affordable to individuals, agencies, or
    communities
  • Must be manageable compatible with existing
    programs - less complex the more likely it will
    succeed.

43
Selecting Outcomes
  • Realistic outcomes must be chosen
  • Community-level outcomes complex often
    expensive to measure
  • Short term/intermediate/long range outcomes need
    to be realistic, affordable meaningful
  • Choice of measurement method important.

44
Selecting Outcomes (cont.)
  • Community-level outcomes not as well developed
  • Ind. community measurements must be precise
    sensitive to change
  • Look at program participation rates
  • Look at process to help refine intervention
  • Measure delivery dose - aspects of program
    delivered received dose - number of
    participants.

45
Deciding Time Frame
  • In order to properly conduct program evaluate
    results - need realistic time frame.
  • For individual focused interventions need at
    least 6 months to evaluate short-term results
  • For more complex community-based programs - need
    5 years
  • Time frame for community-based programs is
    related to acceptance action by community may
    backfire if rushed.

46
Maintaining Behaviour Change
  • Most progress been on promoting beh. change, less
    on promoting maintenance
  • Maintenance seen as process rather than end
  • Psychological processes believed to underlie
    decision to change thought to also affect
    maintenance of change
  • 2 exceptions Banduras cognitive theory TTM
  • Neither theory offers guidance about process of
    maintenance how it differs from initiation
    adoption of beh.

47
Collaboration key to success in community-based
interventions
  • Models developed to link nursing schools to
    communities to provide culturally competent, EBP
    HP interventions
  • Holistic collaborative approach found to be
    effective
  • Requires funding ability to balance multiple
    agendas/missions
  • Community collaboration long term maintenance
    strategies also promotes sustainability.

48
Directions for Research in Evaluating Health
Promotion
  • Expand/test current theories
  • Develop models of beh. maintenance
  • Develop test social ecological models
  • Accurate measures of beh. change needed
  • Reliable/valid/sensitive self-report measures
    new objective measures needed
  • Standardize outcome measures  
  • Research to describe, predict intervene to
    promote long-term maintenance needed
  • Assess cost effectiveness of HP.

49
Directions for Practice in Evaluating Health
Promotion
  • Evaluation of HP is evidence on which to base
    practice
  • Need to develop research skills
  • Nurses need current knowledge of effective HP
    programs interventions so they can deliver
    interventions or provide info to clients
  • Consider cost effectiveness
  • Maintenance is a major problem in health
    behaviour change - Nurses need to follow-up
    carefully identify early relapse.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com