Do published studies of educational outreach provide documentation of potentially important characteristics?

Am J Med Qual. 2013 Nov-Dec;28(6):480-4. doi: 10.1177/1062860613476335. Epub 2013 Feb 11.

Abstract

Educational outreach is a common intervention used to translate research findings into practice; however, the intervention has a mixed effect on changing clinician behavior and improving patient outcomes. Based on a published set of characteristics aimed at standardizing the approach to educational outreach, the authors undertook a careful review of the literature to determine the consistency and completeness of documentation. Using a 25-item abstraction tool, the authors reviewed 68 published studies of a recent Cochrane meta-analysis to determine the extent to which educational outreach studies provide recommended documentation of important characteristics. The results indicate that studies are generally inconsistent (documentation range of 0% to 100% across characteristics) and incomplete (documentation average of 43.1% across studies) in their descriptions. Documentation shortcomings of educational outreach studies make understanding the intervention and interpreting its findings particularly challenging. The authors recommend the creation of a guideline to help improve documentation of educational outreach efforts.

Keywords: academic detailing; continuing education; educational outreach; quality improvement.

Publication types

  • Meta-Analysis

MeSH terms

  • Documentation / standards*
  • Education, Medical, Continuing / organization & administration*
  • Humans
  • Quality Improvement*
  • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
  • Translational Research, Biomedical / organization & administration*
  • United States