Author:
Relle Margaret A.,Hutchinson Jennifer M.,Mattison Adam,Sievert Alicia,Shackelford Anthony G.
Abstract
In an effort to provide optimal patient care, perfusionists should rely on information provided by current research. Present statistics, however, document a substantial underuse of evidence-based clinical practice and therapies not only in perfusion, but throughout the entire medical field. This investigation applied a statistical method—binomial proportion analysis—to aid in uncovering the trends in perfusion practice from 2004 to 2011. Through the analysis of national adult perfusion practice surveys, the feasibility of using binomial proportion statistical analysis is assessed in its ability to track adult perfusion practice proportional differentials over time and evaluate the adoption and attitudes toward the compliance of evidence-based practice within the field of perfusion. Surveys conducted in 2004 and 2006 on adult perfusion practice in the United States—although not published—are compared with data obtained by a similar survey distributed in 2011 through an international perfusion network system and perfusion mailing system, Perflist and Perfmail. The increase of perfusionists who practice retrograde and antegrade autologous priming (R/A AP) seen from 2004 to 2006 (35–50%) was statistically significant (Zcalc= −2.30,p< .05) and from 2006 to 2011 (Zcalc= −5.23;p< .05). Although the increase in biocompatible circuit (BC) use by perfusionists from 2004–2006 (53–64%) was not statistically significant (Zcalc= −1.69,p< .05), the use of BCs did continue to increase (86%) significantly from 2006 to 2011 (Zcalc= −9.15,p< .05). Other trends were observed; however, statistical significance was variable. This investigation demonstrates that binomial proportion statistical analysis is an effective method of evaluating perfusion practice trends and adoptions based on increasing or decreasing perfusion population proportion compliance over time.
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Health Professions (miscellaneous),Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
2 articles.
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