Evaluating the process of tailoring the global HIV/AIDS practice guidelines for use in developing countries

Objective. To describe a systematic procedure for adapting, or ‘tailoring’ the World Health Organisation's ‘global guidelines for the management of HIV/AIDS in adults and children’ for use in two developing countries: Malawi and Barbados. Design. In order for these guidelines to achieve reprodu...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal for quality in health care 1998-04, Vol.10 (2), p.147-154
Hauptverfasser: Wabitsch, Rudolph, Margolis, Carmi Z., Malkin, Jean-Elie, Abu-Saad, Kathleen, Waksman, Javier
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container_end_page 154
container_issue 2
container_start_page 147
container_title International journal for quality in health care
container_volume 10
creator Wabitsch, Rudolph
Margolis, Carmi Z.
Malkin, Jean-Elie
Abu-Saad, Kathleen
Waksman, Javier
description Objective. To describe a systematic procedure for adapting, or ‘tailoring’ the World Health Organisation's ‘global guidelines for the management of HIV/AIDS in adults and children’ for use in two developing countries: Malawi and Barbados. Design. In order for these guidelines to achieve reproducibility, clinical flexibility, and clinical applicability, a systematic procedure is needed to tailor the guidelines to the local practice conditions of specific settings. Methods. A group of local experts in each country used a nominal group process to modify the global program on AIDS (GPA) guidelines for local use. Semantic analysis techniques, known as clinical algorithm nosology (CAN), were used to compare the two modified guidelines with the global ones to determine the extent and type of differences between sets of guidelines. Results. Standard, locally-tailored algorithm map guidelines (AMG) were developed within 4 months. CAN semantic analysis showed that guideline structure was maintained; 572/858 (66.6%) decision nodes were found to be the same in the GPA/Malawi, GPA/Barbados and Malawi/Barbados comparisons. However, different guideline versions managed patients quite differently, as evidenced by clinical algorithm patient abstraction (CAPA) scores of between 0 and 8.46 (0 = different; 8 = similar; 10 = identical). Analysis of the 197 specific differences found in these abstractions showed that 83% were in approaches to diagnosis and therapy, while the remaining 17% related to disease prevalence. Conclusions. Standard techniques involving consensus used to develop clinical guidelines can also be employed to tailor these guidelines to local settings. Semantic analysis shows that the tailoring preserves structure but may involve significant modification to the processes of clinical care that could in turn affect care outcomes.
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To describe a systematic procedure for adapting, or ‘tailoring’ the World Health Organisation's ‘global guidelines for the management of HIV/AIDS in adults and children’ for use in two developing countries: Malawi and Barbados. Design. In order for these guidelines to achieve reproducibility, clinical flexibility, and clinical applicability, a systematic procedure is needed to tailor the guidelines to the local practice conditions of specific settings. Methods. A group of local experts in each country used a nominal group process to modify the global program on AIDS (GPA) guidelines for local use. Semantic analysis techniques, known as clinical algorithm nosology (CAN), were used to compare the two modified guidelines with the global ones to determine the extent and type of differences between sets of guidelines. Results. Standard, locally-tailored algorithm map guidelines (AMG) were developed within 4 months. CAN semantic analysis showed that guideline structure was maintained; 572/858 (66.6%) decision nodes were found to be the same in the GPA/Malawi, GPA/Barbados and Malawi/Barbados comparisons. However, different guideline versions managed patients quite differently, as evidenced by clinical algorithm patient abstraction (CAPA) scores of between 0 and 8.46 (0 = different; 8 = similar; 10 = identical). Analysis of the 197 specific differences found in these abstractions showed that 83% were in approaches to diagnosis and therapy, while the remaining 17% related to disease prevalence. Conclusions. Standard techniques involving consensus used to develop clinical guidelines can also be employed to tailor these guidelines to local settings. 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To describe a systematic procedure for adapting, or ‘tailoring’ the World Health Organisation's ‘global guidelines for the management of HIV/AIDS in adults and children’ for use in two developing countries: Malawi and Barbados. Design. In order for these guidelines to achieve reproducibility, clinical flexibility, and clinical applicability, a systematic procedure is needed to tailor the guidelines to the local practice conditions of specific settings. Methods. A group of local experts in each country used a nominal group process to modify the global program on AIDS (GPA) guidelines for local use. Semantic analysis techniques, known as clinical algorithm nosology (CAN), were used to compare the two modified guidelines with the global ones to determine the extent and type of differences between sets of guidelines. Results. Standard, locally-tailored algorithm map guidelines (AMG) were developed within 4 months. CAN semantic analysis showed that guideline structure was maintained; 572/858 (66.6%) decision nodes were found to be the same in the GPA/Malawi, GPA/Barbados and Malawi/Barbados comparisons. However, different guideline versions managed patients quite differently, as evidenced by clinical algorithm patient abstraction (CAPA) scores of between 0 and 8.46 (0 = different; 8 = similar; 10 = identical). Analysis of the 197 specific differences found in these abstractions showed that 83% were in approaches to diagnosis and therapy, while the remaining 17% related to disease prevalence. Conclusions. Standard techniques involving consensus used to develop clinical guidelines can also be employed to tailor these guidelines to local settings. 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To describe a systematic procedure for adapting, or ‘tailoring’ the World Health Organisation's ‘global guidelines for the management of HIV/AIDS in adults and children’ for use in two developing countries: Malawi and Barbados. Design. In order for these guidelines to achieve reproducibility, clinical flexibility, and clinical applicability, a systematic procedure is needed to tailor the guidelines to the local practice conditions of specific settings. Methods. A group of local experts in each country used a nominal group process to modify the global program on AIDS (GPA) guidelines for local use. Semantic analysis techniques, known as clinical algorithm nosology (CAN), were used to compare the two modified guidelines with the global ones to determine the extent and type of differences between sets of guidelines. Results. Standard, locally-tailored algorithm map guidelines (AMG) were developed within 4 months. CAN semantic analysis showed that guideline structure was maintained; 572/858 (66.6%) decision nodes were found to be the same in the GPA/Malawi, GPA/Barbados and Malawi/Barbados comparisons. However, different guideline versions managed patients quite differently, as evidenced by clinical algorithm patient abstraction (CAPA) scores of between 0 and 8.46 (0 = different; 8 = similar; 10 = identical). Analysis of the 197 specific differences found in these abstractions showed that 83% were in approaches to diagnosis and therapy, while the remaining 17% related to disease prevalence. Conclusions. Standard techniques involving consensus used to develop clinical guidelines can also be employed to tailor these guidelines to local settings. Semantic analysis shows that the tailoring preserves structure but may involve significant modification to the processes of clinical care that could in turn affect care outcomes.</abstract><cop>England</cop><pub>Oxford University Press</pub><pmid>9690888</pmid><doi>10.1093/intqhc/10.2.147</doi><tpages>8</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - diagnosis
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - epidemiology
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - therapy
Adult
AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections - diagnosis
AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections - epidemiology
AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections - therapy
AIDS/HIV
Algorithms
Barbados
Child
clinical algorithms
Developing Countries
Education
guideline adaptation
HIV Infections - diagnosis
HIV Infections - epidemiology
HIV Infections - therapy
HIV management
Humans
Malawi
Patient Care Team
practice guidelines
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Quality Assurance, Health Care
Risk Factors
semantic analysis
World Health Organization
title Evaluating the process of tailoring the global HIV/AIDS practice guidelines for use in developing countries
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