Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
They should allow authors to describe improvement projects so others can learn
Today we publish our first quality improvement
report (p 1460).1 It shows how a group from Paris managed
to improve the management of pain in patients after surgery by
switching them early from intravenous to oral acetaminophen. The report
uses a structure (box) that we have copied with permission from the journal Quality in Health Care.2 One of the
best ways to improve your journal Those who work in quality improvement in health care have a poor
record in publishing their articles. This may be because they are too
busy to publish or because journals won't accept their submissions.
But it might be because reports on improvement projects are hard to
write and because the traditional structure of scientific articles
(IMRAD: introduction, methods, results, and discussion) is unfriendly
to such reports. Structure is the hardest and most important part of
writing. You need a clear structure so that readers don't get lost:
they need to know where they've come from, where they are, and where
they are going. To be lost in a sea of words is depressing. Most
readers who are lost simply give up. The beauty of the IMRAD structure
is that it is familiar to both authors and readers and thus makes life
easier for both.
Unfortunately the IMRAD structure doesn't seem to work well for
improvement reports. There are often repeated cycles of measurement, change, further measurements, and further changes. Interventions are
often multiple, and readers may learn as much (or even more) from the
interventions that didn't work as from those that did. The context
matters much more than in clinical research, and the methods and the
strategies for change are usually much more important than the
results
or anything
is to keep scanning
your environment for good ideas and then copy them.
because they are generalisable in a way that the results are
not. Even if authors can cram their messages into the traditional IMRAD
structure they may fail to convey the messages that matter to their
readers.
Structure of quality improvement reports
The editors of Quality in Health Care developed their new
structure and introduced it last year.2 They have since
published two reports,
3 4
and authors and readers seem to
like them. We will welcome submissions that use the structure of
quality improvement reports. They will be peer reviewed in the normal way.
BMJ
Richard Smith
| 1. |
Ripouteau C, Conort O, Lamas JP, Auleley G-R, Hazebroucq G, Durieux P.
Effect of multifaceted intervention promoting early switch from intravenous to oral acetaminophen for postoperative pain: controlled, prospective, before and after study.
BMJ
2000;
321:
1460-1463 |
| 2. | Moss F, Thompson R. A new structure for quality improvement reports. Qual Health Care 1999; 8: 76[Medline]. |
| 3. | Cox S, Wilcock P, Young J. Improving the repeat prescribing process in a busy general practice. A study using continuous quality improvement methodology. Qual Health Care 1999; 8: 119-125[Abstract]. |
| 4. |
Cunningham C, Newton R.
A question sheet to encourage written consultation questions.
Qual Health Care
1999;
9:
42-46 |
Read all Rapid Responses
Israeli students are refusing to perform intimate examinations on anaesthetised women without their informed consent.