Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s12912-024-01997-8...

Author
Lai, Jie Pilla, Bianca Stephenson, Matthew Brettle, Alison Zhou, Chunlan Li, Wenji Li, Chaixiu Fu, Jiaqi Deng, Shisi Zhang, Yujie Guo, Zihan Wu, Yanni
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Medicine & Public Health

Year

2024

listing date

5/15/2024

Keywords
evidence-based practice clinical audit quality improvement cancer patients chemotherapy nursing assessment reactions adverse implementation evidence project cancer hospitals
Metrics

Abstract

Background Chemotherapy, whilst treating tumours, can also lead to numerous adverse reactions such as nausea and vomiting, fatigue and kidney toxicity, threatening the physical and mental health of patients.

Simultaneously, misuse of chemotherapeutic drugs can seriously endanger patients' lives.

Therefore, to maintain the safety of chemotherapy for cancer patients and to reduce the incidence of adverse reactions to chemotherapy, many guidelines state that a comprehensive assessment of the cancer patient should be conducted and documented before chemotherapy.

This recommended procedure, however, has yet to be extensively embraced in Chinese hospitals.

As such, this study aimed to standardise the content of pre-chemotherapy assessment for cancer patients in hospitals and to improve nurses' adherence to pre-chemotherapy assessment of cancer patients by conducting a national multi-site evidence implementation in China, hence protecting the safety of cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and reducing the incidence of adverse reactions to chemotherapy in patients.

Methods The national multi-site evidence implementation project was launched by a JBI Centre of Excellence in China and conducted using the JBI approach to evidence implementation.

A pre- and post-audit approach was used to evaluate the effectiveness of the project.

This project had seven phases: training, planning, baseline audit, evidence implementation, two rounds of follow-up audits (3 and 9 months after evidence implementation, respectively) and sustainability assessment.

A live online broadcast allowed all participating hospitals to come together to provide a summary and feedback on the implementation of the project.

Results Seventy-four hospitals from 32 cities in China participated in the project, four withdrew during the project's implementation, and 70 hospitals completed the project.

The pre-and post-audit showed a significant improvement in the compliance rate of nurses performing pre-chemotherapy assessments for cancer patients.

Patient satisfaction and chemotherapy safety were also improved through the project's implementation, and the participating nurses' enthusiasm and belief in implementing evidence into practice was increased.

Conclusion The study demonstrated the feasibility of academic centres working with hospitals to promote the dissemination of evidence in clinical practice to accelerate knowledge translation.

Further research is needed on the effectiveness of cross-regional and cross-organisational collaborations to facilitate evidence dissemination.

Lai, Jie,Pilla, Bianca,Stephenson, Matthew,Brettle, Alison,Zhou, Chunlan,Li, Wenji,Li, Chaixiu,Fu, Jiaqi,Deng, Shisi,Zhang, Yujie,Guo, Zihan,Wu, Yanni, 2024, Pre-treatment assessment of chemotherapy for cancer patients: a multi-site evidence implementation project of 74 hospitals in China, BioMed Central

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