A Reporting Tool for Adapted Guidelines in Health Care: The RIGHT-Ad@pt Checklist.
Journal
Annals of internal medicine
ISSN: 1539-3704
Titre abrégé: Ann Intern Med
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0372351
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
05 2022
05 2022
Historique:
pubmed:
15
3
2022
medline:
20
5
2022
entrez:
14
3
2022
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Adaptation of existing guidelines can be an efficient way to develop contextualized recommendations. Transparent reporting of the adaptation approach can support the transparency and usability of the adapted guidelines. To develop an extension of the RIGHT (Reporting Items for practice Guidelines in HealThcare) statement for the reporting of adapted guidelines (including recommendations that have been adopted, adapted, or developed de novo), the RIGHT-Ad@pt checklist. A multistep process was followed to develop the checklist: establishing a working group, generating an initial checklist, optimizing the checklist (through an initial assessment of adapted guidelines, semistructured interviews, a Delphi consensus survey, an external review, and a final assessment of adapted guidelines), and approval of the final checklist by the working group. International collaboration. A total of 119 professionals participated in the development process. Participants' consensus on items in the checklist. The RIGHT-Ad@pt checklist contains 34 items grouped in 7 sections: basic information (7 items); scope (6 items); rigor of development (10 items); recommendations (4 items); external review and quality assurance (2 items); funding, declaration, and management of interest (2 items); and other information (3 items). A user guide with explanations and real-world examples for each item was developed to provide a better user experience. The RIGHT-Ad@pt checklist requires further validation in real-life use. The RIGHT-Ad@pt checklist has been developed to improve the reporting of adapted guidelines, focusing on the standardization, rigor, and transparency of the process and the clarity and explicitness of adapted recommendations. None.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
Adaptation of existing guidelines can be an efficient way to develop contextualized recommendations. Transparent reporting of the adaptation approach can support the transparency and usability of the adapted guidelines.
OBJECTIVE
To develop an extension of the RIGHT (Reporting Items for practice Guidelines in HealThcare) statement for the reporting of adapted guidelines (including recommendations that have been adopted, adapted, or developed de novo), the RIGHT-Ad@pt checklist.
DESIGN
A multistep process was followed to develop the checklist: establishing a working group, generating an initial checklist, optimizing the checklist (through an initial assessment of adapted guidelines, semistructured interviews, a Delphi consensus survey, an external review, and a final assessment of adapted guidelines), and approval of the final checklist by the working group.
SETTING
International collaboration.
PARTICIPANTS
A total of 119 professionals participated in the development process.
MEASUREMENTS
Participants' consensus on items in the checklist.
RESULTS
The RIGHT-Ad@pt checklist contains 34 items grouped in 7 sections: basic information (7 items); scope (6 items); rigor of development (10 items); recommendations (4 items); external review and quality assurance (2 items); funding, declaration, and management of interest (2 items); and other information (3 items). A user guide with explanations and real-world examples for each item was developed to provide a better user experience.
LIMITATION
The RIGHT-Ad@pt checklist requires further validation in real-life use.
CONCLUSION
The RIGHT-Ad@pt checklist has been developed to improve the reporting of adapted guidelines, focusing on the standardization, rigor, and transparency of the process and the clarity and explicitness of adapted recommendations.
PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE
None.
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
710-719Subventions
Organisme : World Health Organization
ID : 001
Pays : International
Investigateurs
Yasser Amer
(Y)
Ingrid Arevalo-Rodriguez
(I)
Steven Barnes
(S)
Jorge Barreto
(J)
Deborah Collis
(D)
Suzanne Dyer
(S)
Christine Fahim
(C)
Ivan Florez
(I)
Veronica Gallegos-Rivero
(V)
Miloslav Klugar
(M)
Ton Kuijpers
(T)
Joseph L Mathew
(JL)
Zachary Munn
(Z)
Sarah Norris
(S)
Daniel F PatiÒo-Lugo
(DF)
C S Pramesh
(CS)
Jaime Rodriguez
(J)
Sudipto Roy
(S)
Ein-Soon Shin
(ES)
Ojino Sosa
(O)
Per Olav Vandvik
(PO)
Marcela Velez
(M)
Rachel Woodcraft
(R)
Yang Song
(Y)
Pablo Alonso-Coello
(P)
Monica Ballesteros
(M)
Francoise Cluzeau
(F)
Robin W M Vernooij
(RWM)
Elie A Akl
(EA)
Laura Martínez García
(L)
Thurayya Arayssi
(T)
Soumyadeep Bhaumik
(S)
Yaolong Chen
(Y)
Davina Ghersi
(D)
Etienne V Langlois
(EV)
Paulina Fuentes Padilla
(P)
Holger J Schünemann
(HJ)