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- de Wit Kerstin K *Department of Medicine,McMaster University,Hamilton,ON., Janet Curran, Brent Thoma, Shawn Dowling, Eddy Lang, Nebojsa Kuljic, Jeffrey J Perry, and Laurie Morrison.
- *Department of Medicine,McMaster University,Hamilton,ON.
- Can J Emerg Med. 2018 May 1; 20 (3): 453-460.
ObjectivesAdvances in emergency medicine research can be slow to make their way into clinical care, and implementing a new evidence-based intervention can be challenging in the emergency department. The Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP) Knowledge Translation Symposium working group set out to produce recommendations for best practice in the implementation of a new science in Canadian emergency departments.MethodsA systematic review of implementation strategies to change health care provider behaviour in the emergency department was conducted simultaneously with a national survey of emergency physician experience. We summarized our findings into a list of draft recommendations that were presented at the national CAEP Conference 2017 and further refined based on feedback through social media strategies.ResultsWe produced 10 recommendations for implementing new evidence-based interventions in the emergency department, which cover identifying a practice gap, evaluating the evidence, planning the intervention strategy, monitoring, providing feedback during implementation, and desired qualities of future implementation research.ConclusionsWe present recommendations to guide future emergency department implementation initiatives. There is a need for robust and well-designed implementation research to guide future emergency department implementation initiatives.
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