Author:
Khan Aamir T,Mehr M Nauman,Gaynor Anne-Marie,Bowcock Malcolm,Khan Khalid S
Abstract
Abstract
Background
To examine the rates of evidence-supported care provided in an obstetrics-gynaecology unit.
Methods
The main diagnosis-intervention set was established for a sample of 325 consecutive inpatient admissions in 1998–99 in a prospective study in a UK tertiary care centre. A comprehensive literature search was conducted to obtain the evidence supporting the intervention categorised according to the following hierarchy: Grade A, care supported by evidence from randomised controlled trials; Grade B, care supported by evidence from controlled observational studies and convincing non-randomised evidence; and Grade C, care without substantial research evidence.
Results
Of the 325 admissions, in 135 (42%) the quality of care was based on Grade A evidence, in 157 (48%) it was based on Grade B evidence, and in 33 (10%) it was based on Grade C evidence. The patterns of care were not different amongst patients sampled in 1998 and 1999.
Conclusion
A significant majority (90%) of obstetric and gynaecological care was found to be supported by substantial research evidence.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Obstetrics and Gynaecology,Reproductive Medicine,General Medicine
Cited by
6 articles.
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