Bench-to-bedside review: The evaluation of complex interventions in critical care

被引:0
|
作者
Anthony Delaney
Derek C Angus
Rinaldo Bellomo
Peter Cameron
D James Cooper
Simon Finfer
David A Harrison
David T Huang
John A Myburgh
Sandra L Peake
Michael C Reade
Steve AR Webb
Donald M Yealy
机构
[1] University of Sydney,Northern Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine
[2] Intensive Care Unit,Department of Critical Care Medicine
[3] Royal North Shore Hospital,Department of Intensive Care
[4] University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine,Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine
[5] Austin Hospital,Department of Intensive Care Medicine
[6] Monash University and Alfred Hospital,Department of Intensive Care Medicine
[7] Monash University and Alfred Hospital,Department of Intensive Care Medicine
[8] Royal North Shore Hospital of Sydney,Royal Perth Hospital
[9] ICNARC,Department of Emergency Medicine
[10] Tavistock House,undefined
[11] The St George Hospital,undefined
[12] Queen Elizabeth Hospital,undefined
[13] Austin Hospital,undefined
[14] University of Melbourne,undefined
[15] University of Western Australia,undefined
[16] University of Pittsburgh,undefined
来源
Critical Care | / 12卷
关键词
Severe Sepsis; Complex Intervention; Medical Emergency Team; Central Venous Oxygen Saturation; Resuscitation Protocol;
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摘要
Complex interventions, such as the introduction of medical emergency teams or an early goal-directed therapy protocol, are developed from a number of components that may act both independently and inter-dependently. There is an emerging body of literature advocating the use of integrated complex interventions to optimise the treatment of critically ill patients. As with any other treatment, complex interventions should undergo careful evaluation prior to widespread introduction into clinical practice. During the development of an international collaboration of researchers investigating protocol-based approaches to the resuscitation of patients with severe sepsis, we examined the specific issues related to the evaluation of complex interventions. This review outlines some of these issues. The issues specific to trials of complex interventions that require particular attention include determining an appropriate study population and defining current treatments and outcomes in that population, defining the study intervention and the treatment to be used in the control group, and deploying the intervention in a standardised manner. The context in which the research takes place, including existing staffing levels and existing protocols and procedures, is crucial. We also discuss specific details of trial execution, in particular randomization, blinded outcome adjudication and analysis of the results, which are key to avoiding bias in the design and interpretation of such trials.
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