Improving the identification and management of chronic kidney disease in primary care: lessons from a staged improvement collaborative.

Gill Harvey; Kathryn Oliver ORCID logo; John Humphreys; Katy Rothwell; Janet Hegarty; (2014) Improving the identification and management of chronic kidney disease in primary care: lessons from a staged improvement collaborative. International journal for quality in health care, 27 (1). pp. 10-16. ISSN 1353-4505 DOI: 10.1093/intqhc/mzu097
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QUALITY PROBLEM: Undiagnosed chronic kidney disease (CKD) contributes to a high cost and care burden in secondary care. Uptake of evidence-based guidelines in primary care is inconsistent, resulting in variation in the detection and management of CKD. INITIAL ASSESSMENT: Routinely collected general practice data in one UK region suggested a CKD prevalence of 4.1%, compared with an estimated national prevalence of 8.5%. Of patients on CKD registers, ∼ 30% were estimated to have suboptimal management according to Public Health Observatory analyses. CHOICE OF SOLUTION: An evidence-based framework for implementation was developed. This informed the design of an improvement collaborative to work with a sample of 30 general practices. IMPLEMENTATION: A two-phase collaborative was implemented between September 2009 and March 2012. Key elements of the intervention included learning events, improvement targets, Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles, benchmarking of audit data, facilitator support and staff time reimbursement. EVALUATION: Outcomes were evaluated against two indicators: number of patients with CKD on practice registers; percentage of patients achieving evidence-based blood pressure (BP) targets, as a marker for CKD care. In Phase 1, recorded prevalence of CKD in collaborative practices increased ∼ 2-fold more than that in comparator local practices; in Phase 2, this increased to 4-fold, indicating improved case identification. Management of BP according to guideline recommendations also improved. LESSONS LEARNED: An improvement collaborative with tailored facilitation support appears to promote the uptake of evidence-based guidance on the identification and management of CKD in primary care. A controlled evaluation study is needed to rigorously evaluate the impact of this promising improvement intervention.


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