2022
DOI: 10.1001/jamasurg.2022.0812
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Quality Indicators Targeting Low-Value Clinical Practices in Trauma Care

Abstract: for the Low-Value Practices in Trauma Care Expert Consensus Group IMPORTANCE The use of quality indicators has been shown to improve injury care processes and outcomes. However, trauma quality indicators proposed to date exclusively target the underuse of recommended practices. Initiatives such as Choosing Wisely publish lists of practices to be questioned, but few apply to trauma care, and most have not successfully been translated to quality indicators. OBJECTIVE To develop a set of evidence and patient-info… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…In addition to low frequency, repeated head CT had low construct validity and ICU admission for mild complicated TBI had low construct and predictive validity. Of note, repeated CT for mild complicated TBI was selected by the panel of international experts in our consensus study but not by local stakeholders, whereas ICU admission for the same diagnosis was selected by local stakeholders but not by international experts …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In addition to low frequency, repeated head CT had low construct validity and ICU admission for mild complicated TBI had low construct and predictive validity. Of note, repeated CT for mild complicated TBI was selected by the panel of international experts in our consensus study but not by local stakeholders, whereas ICU admission for the same diagnosis was selected by local stakeholders but not by international experts …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hospital admission in blunt abdominal trauma with a negative CT had an incidence above 10% and high interhospital variation but low case volume and low construct and predictive validity. This QI was selected by international experts but not by local stakeholders in our consensus study and is one of the few that is not targeted in any clinical practice guidelines we identified. Finally, the QI on orthosis in thoracolumbar burst fractures had low frequency and construct validity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In addition to unfamiliarity with this nascent science and complexities of the whole process, most frequently reported barriers are patient-related (lack of awareness, belief that more is better, demands, and preferences), provider-related (lack of awareness/conviction re: LVC, belief that their experience is better, lack of time for shared decision making, the number of tests recommended by specialists, malpractice concerns), health system-related (lack of leadership support, financial incentives to do more-irrespective of value, and resistance/restriction by insurance regulators), evidencerelated (heterogeneous studies with imprecise measures and high risk of bias, low quality systematic reviews, lack of credible strong evidence to support de-implementation), or society-related (cultural norms or health policy) [6,[22][23][24][25][26][27][28]. However, it must be conceded that it is an evolving science with heterogeneous metrics and such scientific exercises take time [23,28].…”
Section: Barriers and Facilitators For De-implementationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the need to make rapid decisions between multiple diagnostic and therapeutic options, trauma care is a high-risk setting for low-value practices (LVPs), defined as tests or treatments not supported by evidence or that expose patients to unnecessary harm . A consensus-based list of 16 LVPs for trauma care was recently published . Studies have estimated spending associated with such services among individuals with fee-for-service Medicare at about US $50 000 per 1000 admissions .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%