Clinical Study

Eye advance online publication 26 October 2007; doi: 10.1038/sj.eye.6703029

Evidence-based medicine audit as a tool for improving emergency ophthalmology

Financial/competing interests: none This project was presented for the John Glyn Young Fellows Audit Prize (2007) at the Royal Society of Medicine

M S Sagoo1 and J Raina1

1Department of Ophthalmology, North Middlesex University Hospital, London, UK

Correspondence: MS Sagoo, Moorfields Eye Hospital, City Road, London EC1V 2PD, UK. Tel: +020 7253 3411; Fax: +020 7566 2062; E-mail: sagoo@doctors.org.uk

Received 16 June 2007; Revised 25 September 2007; Accepted 2 October 2007; Published online 26 October 2007.

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Abstract

Aim

 

To audit the proportion of interventions in emergency ophthalmology that are evidence based and to determine whether the quality of care can be improved.

Methods

 

Audit of diagnosis–intervention pairs was carried out retrospectively in March 2003. The outcomes were assessed for evidence level reached in the Medline database 1966–2003 and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Locally agreed guidelines were issued and the study repeated prospectively in March 2004, when new medical staff were at a similar level of experience. The participants had no prior knowledge of the study to avoid prescribing bias (Hawthorne's phenomenon).

Results

 

In the first part of the audit in 2003, 71% of interventions were evidence based, with 36% derived from systematic reviews, meta-analysis or randomised controlled trials (evidence levels 1–3). After guidelines for care were implemented in 2004, there was an improvement in the number of evidence-based interventions to 82% (P=0.04), and levels 1–3 were reached in 60% (P=0.02). The proportion with no evidence or against evidence dropped from 29 to 18% (P=0.04). An additional benefit was to reduce the number of re-attendances required.

Conclusion

 

Evidence-based medicine can be used to improve the quality of care in the acute ophthalmic setting, both in refining the standard of interventions and in reducing the number of hospital visits.

Keywords:

evidence based, emergency, ophthalmology, audit

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