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Clinical and economic outcomes of nurse-led services in the ambulatory care setting: A systematic review. | LitMetric

Clinical and economic outcomes of nurse-led services in the ambulatory care setting: A systematic review.

Int J Nurs Stud

School of Nursing and Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia; Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Metro North Hospital and Health Service, Queensland Health, Australia.

Published: May 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The review examines the impact of nurse-led services in outpatient care, highlighting their potential to alleviate the strain of chronic diseases on the healthcare system by reducing waiting times, costs, and resource usage while ensuring patient satisfaction and safety.
  • Conducted using Cochrane methodology, the systematic review analyzed 25 studies involving over 180,000 participants, particularly focusing on clinical effectiveness and economic outcomes of nurse-led models versus standard care.
  • Findings show mixed results for health-related quality of life; however, most studies indicated that nurse-led care performed similarly or better than physician-led care in several areas, including symptom management and patient satisfaction.

Article Abstract

Background: With the increasing burden of chronic and age-related diseases, and the rapidly increasing number of patients receiving ambulatory or outpatient-based care, nurse-led services have been suggested as one solution to manage increasing demand on the health system as they aim to reduce waiting times, resources, and costs while maintaining patient safety and enhancing satisfaction.

Objectives: The aims of this review were to assess the clinical effectiveness, economic outcomes and key implementation characteristics of nurse-led services in the ambulatory care setting.

Design: A systematic review was conducted using the standard Cochrane Collaboration methodology and was prepared in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines.

Data Sources: We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) on The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE EBSCO, CINAHL EBSCO, and PsycINFO Ovid (from inception to April 2016).

Review Methods: Data were extracted and appraisal undertaken. We included randomised controlled trials; quasi-randomised controlled trials; controlled and non-controlled before-and-after studies that compared the effects of nurse-led services in the ambulatory or community care setting with an alternative model of care or standard care.

Results: Twenty-five studies of 180,308 participants were included in this review. Of the 16 studies that measured and reported on health-related quality of life outcomes, the majority of studies (n = 13) reported equivocal outcomes; with three studies demonstrating superior outcomes and one demonstrating inferior outcomes in comparison with physician-led and standard care. Nurse-led care demonstrated either equivalent or better outcomes for a number of outcomes including symptom burden, self-management and behavioural outcomes, disease-specific indicators, satisfaction and perception of quality of life, and health service use. Benefits of nurse-led services remain inconclusive in terms of economic outcomes.

Conclusions: Nurse-led care is a safe and feasible model of care for consideration across a number of ambulatory care settings. With appropriate training and support provided, nurse-led care is able to produce at least equivocal outcomes or at times better outcomes in terms of health-related quality of life compared to physician-led care or standard care for managing chronic conditions. There is a lack of high quality economic evaluations for nurse-led services, which is essential for guiding the decision making of health policy makers. Key factors such as education and qualification of the nurse; self-management support; resources available for the nurse; prescribing capabilities; and evaluation using appropriate outcome should be carefully considered for future planning of nurse-led services.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2018.02.002DOI Listing

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