Background

The objective of clinical and health systems research (herein referred to as ‘research’) is typically to advance our understanding of human health and/or to create new knowledge. The objective of quality improvement (QI) is to iteratively refine a system to improve a pre-determined outcome. Its methodologies are increasingly recognized as having the potential to contribute to the design, conduct, and analysis of research programs [1]. In some cases, this mixed-methods approach may more efficiently achieve measurable improved patient and process of care outcomes [2].

The Canadian emergency medicine (EM) community is uniquely positioned to operationalize the benefits of enhanced collaboration between research and QI [1]. Opportunities for enhanced and mutually beneficial partnerships exist at many levels, including EM providers, academic EM physicians (i.e. both researchers and QI experts), and academic leaders (e.g., EM Chairs, emergency department (ED) Chiefs, and ED Research or QI Directors). These constituency groups all have an intrinsic responsibility to the advancement of the quality of care, with the ultimate objective of improved patient outcomes.

Through a scoping review of the literature and a national stakeholder engagement process, we sought to identify concrete ways through which collaboration between researchers and QI experts in the EM community can be facilitated. Herein, we provide the recommendations stemming from this process and we describe complementary methodologies to maximize project impact.

Methods

Expert panel process

We formed an expert panel that included seven staff emergency physicians and one EM resident, affiliated with six different Canadian medical schools. Panel members were selected based on expertise in QI, patient safety and research, as well as diversity of professional experience and geographic representation. Panel members’ roles include heads of departmental quality and/or research programs, national leadership roles, and front-line clinicians.

The panel developed a draft list of recommendations based on a scoping review of the literature, as well as their professional experience and academic expertise. The panel then iteratively refined these recommendations through a series of phone discussions facilitated by the co-chairs (LBC and SLD) over the course of ten months.

Stakeholder engagement

The expert panel sought feedback from 14 members of the Canadian EM community, including seven identified as QI experts and nine identified as researchers (two fulfilled both descriptions). This group included experts, thought and academic leaders, peer-reviewed journal editors, and front-line emergency medicine clinicians. Based on their feedback, recommendations were refined with evidence referenced where possible to ensure validity.

Public comment

As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP) 2020 Academic Symposium where the draft recommendations were meant to be discussed in person was canceled. Instead, the recommendations were shared with a group of stakeholders for feedback and improvement, including members of the CAEP QIPS Committee and research community. This iterated product was then presented at the CAEP Virtual Symposium on October 1st, 2020, for final validation and refinement, using three methods for feedback: real-time chat, PollEverywhere® (San Francisco, CA, USA) comments, as well as a post-Symposium survey of attendees.

Recommendations

To enhance collaboration between QI experts and researchers, we defined the following recommendations aimed at EM providers, academic EM physicians, and academic leaders (Table 1).

Table 1 Summary of recommendations

Emergency medicine providers

Recommendation 1. All emergency medicine providers should understand the role and application of both clinical research and quality improvement science

A basic understanding of both clinical research and QI methods will enable EM providers to adopt the tools most suited for addressing the clinical challenges they face. Although there are differences in purpose and methods between QI and research, the underlying goal of both is usually to improve health care and patient outcomes. Both rely on stakeholder engagement, creative and adaptive designs, meticulous and systematic measurement, effective data management, and thoughtful dissemination of results [1]. Without research there is no new knowledge to implement, and the creation of new knowledge in isolation will not result in improved patient care.

Undergraduate and postgraduate medical education curricula for research have matured over decades, but Canadian postgraduate QI curricula lack similar structure and opportunities [3]. There must be a joint effort by respective experts to ensure that enhanced academic curricula cover both research and QI methodologies. Curricula may include encouraging a minimum research and QI literacy requirement for all trainees (supported by the inclusion of competencies reflecting patient safety and quality improvement in CanMEDS 2015 [4]), providing comprehensive project and mentorship opportunities, and ensuring that trainees willing to engage in further training in either or both streams are appropriately supported [5]. Training, mentorship and professional development opportunities are needed for practicing physicians in both research and QI methodologies. To facilitate access to resources for enhancing QI knowledge, CAEP has developed a QIPS Resource webpage [6].

Academic emergency medicine physicians

Recommendation 2. Academic emergency medicine physicians should contribute to both local adoption and broad dissemination of project findings

The ideal outcome for research should be both dissemination of new knowledge globally and the successful adoption of effective practices locally; the latter sometimes being particularly challenging to successfully implement and sustain. Conversely, rigorous health care QI programs exist and are often carried out with the primary goal of improving local care. However, their impact can be impaired without effective academic dissemination. This results in repetition of projects between locales, resulting in unnecessary waste. This is partly due to the overlap of QI projects with operational tasks and change management approaches, as well as project completion by leads not traditionally driven by scholarly dissemination [7]. On the other hand, research success is often measured by its ability to contribute to practice guidelines or scientific statements, and dissemination of results in peer-reviewed journals. The corollary to this strength is the historically lower emphasis on translating these findings into practical and sustainable local impact [8].

A new way forward that allows for broad dissemination and local adoption of all projects is needed. Shared learning has proven beneficial with Quality Improvement Collaboratives (QICs), where multiple sites benefit from the exchange of evidence-based practices despite variability between sites. This collaborative approach may prove to be a useful method for implementing research findings into multiple healthcare settings [9, 10]. The Network of Canadian Emergency Researchers (NCER) is another potential platform for QI and research teams to collaborate and share their work.

Recommendation 3. Quality improvement methodology should be leveraged by researchers to improve the knowledge translation of study findings

Traditionally, peer-reviewed dissemination (i.e. end-of-grant knowledge translation) has been the vehicle for knowledge spread [10]. This possibly contributes to a knowledge translation ‘gap’, whereby new knowledge is not incorporated into clinical practice in a timely fashion [11]. Clinical researchers have increasingly adopted a broader set of approaches to close this knowledge translation gap, leading to greater realized impact. Inclusion of QI methodologies throughout the life cycle of projects, otherwise known as integrated knowledge translation, can further augment such efforts, but they should be considered at the earliest stages of protocol development (Table 2). This could include, for example, earlier meaningful engagement of front-line providers and/or patients to appraise the relevance of project hypotheses and findings; use of alternative methodologies such as process flow maps, cause and effect analyses, or Pareto charts [12]; and iteratively refining study interventions to enhance local adoption and sustainability. Given that multiple barriers to implementation exist even with the presence of clear clinical practice guidelines, collaboration between researchers and QI experts can help ensure the production of quality evidence and its translation into sustainable process improvements [8, 9].

Table 2 Quality improvement methodology relevant to various steps of research studies

Recommendation 4. Researchers and quality improvement experts should ensure that their respective project outcomes prioritize patient care

Improving patient outcomes is an objective of most EM research programs. Although the broad strategic vision and funding of research programs are influenced by various leaders and organizations outside of EM, researchers have a role in ensuring that the focus remains centered on patients. As EM research diversifies, it is incumbent on researchers and QI experts to seek and highlight links between their projects and specific patient-oriented outcomes.

Further, research should strive to ensure that findings are broadly applicable, and QI experts should promote this through the development of a thoughtful family of measures, the inclusion of end-users and providers in measure selection, and the performance of usability testing to ensure that the measures selected reflect the intended outcomes. Valuing the effectiveness of study interventions on patients and ensuring that knowledge benefits patients beyond the study period requires a multipronged approach of rigorous trials (and errors) and can be supported by QI methodology [13]. Similarly, QI projects must ensure that the proposed cycles of change are evidence supported.

Academic leaders

Recommendation 5. Academic leaders should strive to enhance the infrastructure for oversight of research and quality improvement projects

As we progress toward a data-rich healthcare environment, the differentiation between QI and research is sometimes hard to make [14]. New pathways are needed to ensure risks to patients are minimized both from research but also from unaddressed correctable quality gaps. Canadian research abides by the Tri-Council Policy Statement for the Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans [15]. These standards are written specifically for situations where participants are subject to added risks beyond changes to routine care, and they are typically enforced through local Research Ethics Boards (REBs). Many organizations require QI projects to be reviewed through the same pathway. This process, as currently designed, may prolong patients’ exposure to preventable harm by making low-risk projects unworkable, limit the ability to use iterative methods, and increase the length of time required for all REB reviews. Additionally, low-risk research initiatives may warrant proportionate-risk REB review.

A more discerning project oversight process could be used constructively by both researchers and QI experts to ensure appropriate reviews for all project types and enable the appropriate level of oversight for proposed interventions. This process could include stratification of review processes: low-risk projects being required to meet the standards of routine health care delivery, moderate-risk projects subject to advisory group review, and high-risk projects (e.g., with added risks to patients, or those involving external funding, conflicts of interests or traditional research components) required to meet typical Tri-Council requirements [16]. This would ensure that all studies have rigorous oversight where added patient risk is involved, but also encourage low-risk projects without significant change to routine health care delivery.

One tool that may be included in this process’ decision-making matrix is the ARECCI (A pRoject Ethics Community Consensus Initiative) tool. It is a screening tool that provides decision-support guidance to teams for alternative methodology projects involving people or personal health information, based on the level of risk for the participants [17]. Created for use in Alberta, Canada, it provides a template which clarifies when REB oversight is required for specific projects.

Recommendation 6. Academic leaders should encourage collaboration between researchers and quality improvement experts by ensuring that academic and operational infrastructures align and support both

It behooves universities, health care organizations and EM departments to build successful and sustainable academic programs. These require support from all levels of leadership (i.e. departmental, organizational and university) on: frameworks aligning research and QI, explicit pathways for both to support academic promotion, and adequate funding strategies.

One strategy is for academic leaders to align processes to leverage engagement of researchers and QI experts. This could include the creation of multi-modal academic networks (i.e. research and QI combined), encouragement of representation of relevant experts on each other’s working groups, and even incentives and rewards for cross-collaboration, such as time in lieu of academic pursuits or points systems. As collaborative academic endeavors mature in the coming years, efforts should focus on developing local frameworks to appropriately match a clinical hypothesis or problem to the optimal methodology: research, QI, or hybrid research-QI. These local frameworks should also understand and acknowledge the differences between QI and research to maintain the integrity of both while enabling integration. Ultimately, this will help integrate academic endeavors with operational priorities.

Another strategy is to link academic leadership performance with the diversification of an academic unit’s portfolio. This goal is in line with salary benefits for hospital executives that are often tied to success in the organization’s Quality Improvement Plan, and it can be achieved in part by the development of sustainable academic funding and collaboration for data management.

Securing funding from innovative and diversified sources is essential to create a sustainable and robust research program, including non-traditional sources (e.g., philanthropy, operational funds, etc.) so that projects of local importance can be supported [18]. QI expands possible funding sources and may improve process efficiency and cost. For example, in a national survey of Canadian EM QIPS leads, 18% indicated their contribution to the departmental funding through external peer-reviewed QIPS grants [19].

Conclusion

We described considerations for enhanced collaboration between QI experts and researchers, with a goal of forming a joint team with diverse expertise rather than perpetuating the silos that may have inadvertently developed over time. All members are aligned in their ultimate goal of improving patient outcomes, with the differences in methodology and implementation being a strength when pooled. These recommendations describe how collaboration can be mutually beneficial, with tangible action items at the levels of EM providers, academic EM physicians and academic leaders.