Implementing early feeding after liver transplant using implementation frameworks: A multimethod study

Author:

Takefala Tahnie G.1ORCID,Mayr Hannah L.123,Doola Raeesa1234ORCID,Johnston Heidi E.1,Hodgkinson Peter J.5,Andelkovic Melita456,Macdonald Graeme A.456ORCID,Hickman Ingrid J.147

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nutrition and Dietetics Princess Alexandra Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

2. Bond University Nutrition and Dietetics Research Group, Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University Gold Coast Queensland Australia

3. Centre for Functioning and Health Research, Metro South Health Brisbane Queensland Australia

4. Faculty of Medicine The University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

5. Queensland Liver Transplant Service, Princess Alexandra Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

6. Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Princess Alexandra Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

7. Clinical Trial Capability ULTRA team, The University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEvidence‐based guidelines (EBGs) in the nutrition management of advanced liver disease and enhanced recovery after surgery recommendations state that normal diet should recommence 12–24 h following liver transplantation. This study aimed to compare postoperative nutrition practices to guideline recommendations, explore clinician perceptions regarding feeding after transplant surgery, and implement and evaluate strategies to improve postoperative nutrition practices.MethodsA pre‐post multimethod implementation study was undertaken, guided by the knowledge‐to‐action framework. A retrospective chart audit of postoperative dietary practice and semistructured interviews with clinicians were undertaken. Implementation strategies were informed by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research–Expert Recommendations for Implementing Change matching tool and then evaluated.ResultsAn evidence‐practice gap was identified, with the median day to initiation of nutrition (free‐fluid or full diet) on postoperative day (POD) 2 and only 25% of patients aligning with the EBGs. Clinician interviews identified belief in the importance of nutrition, with variation in surgical practice in relation to early nutrition, competing clinical priorities, and vulnerabilities in communication contributing to delays in returning to feeding. An endorsed postoperative nutrition protocol was implemented along with a suite of theory‐ and stakeholder‐informed intervention strategies. Following implementation, the median time to initiate nutrition reduced to POD1 and alignment with EBGs improved to 60%.ConclusionThis study used implementation frameworks and strategies to understand, implement, and improve early feeding practices in line with EBGs after liver transplant. Ongoing sustainability of practice change as well as the impact on clinical outcomes have yet to be determined.

Funder

PA Research Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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