Skip to main content

Transition in care from paramedics to emergency department nurses: a systematic review protocol

Abstract

Background

Effective and efficient transitions in care between emergency medical services (EMS) practitioners and emergency department (ED) nurses is vital as poor clinical transitions in care may place patients at increased risk for adverse events such as delay in treatment for time sensitive conditions (e.g., myocardial infarction) or worsening of status (e.g., sepsis). Such transitions in care are complex and prone to communication errors primarily caused by misunderstanding related to divergent professional perspectives leading to misunderstandings that are further susceptible to contextual factors and divergent professional lenses. In this systematic review, we aim to examine (1) factors that mitigate or improve transitions in care specifically from EMS practitioners to ED nurses, and (2) effectiveness of interventional strategies that lead to improvements in communication and fewer adverse events.

Methods

We will search electronic databases (DARE, MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane, CINAHL, Joanna Briggs Institute EBP; Communication Abstracts); gray literature (gray literature databases, organization websites, querying experts in emergency medicine); and reference lists and conduct forward citation searches of included studies. All English-language primary studies will be eligible for inclusion if the study includes (1) EMS practitioners or ED nurses involved in transitions for arriving EMS patients; and (2) an intervention to improve transitions in care or description of factors that influence transitions in care (barriers/facilitators, perceptions, experiences, quality of information exchange). Two reviewers will independently screen titles/abstracts and full texts for inclusion and methodological quality. We will use narrative and thematic synthesis to integrate and explore relationships within the data. Should the data permit, a meta-analysis will be conducted.

Discussion

This systematic review will help identify factors that influence communication between EMS and ED nurses during transitions in care, and identify interventional strategies that lead to improved communication and decrease in adverse events. The findings can be used to develop an evidence-informed transitions in care tool that ensures efficient transfer of accurate patient information, continuity of care, enhances patient safety, and avoids duplication of services. This review will also identify gaps in the existing literature to inform future research efforts.

Trial registration

PROSPERO CRD42017068844

Peer Review reports

Background

Transitions in care between healthcare providers are complex processes that can result in vital information being lost or altered [1,2,3]. Three points of transition in care can occur for patients arriving in the Emergency Department (ED) via Emergency Medical Services (EMS): (1) EMS to triage nurse, (2) EMS to bedside nurse, and (3) EMS to ED trauma team. Efficient and safe transitions in care are dependent on accurate communication of pertinent patient information between health service providers [4, 5]. Information transfer during transitions between EMS-ED nurses can be hampered by multiple factors, including interruptions, multitasking, workload, and suboptimal working relationships [2, 6, 7]. This can result in loss of key information [6], which may negatively impact patient safety. Poor clinical transitions in care within the ED between care providers may place patients at increased risk for harm, such as overlooking early deterioration, risk of transferring cognitive bias, and delayed or missed investigations [5, 8, 9]. It is, thus, vital that transitions in care within and between professional groups providing ED care, including EMS practitioners-ED nurses, is accurate and efficient.

EMS practitioners and ED nurses have different professional perspectives. EMS practitioners in the pre-hospital setting focus on information that enables them to determine underlying pathology/injury, required treatments, and destination [10,11,12]. They have key insights about the unfolding of events, goals of care, and the patient’s environment. Furthermore, they are aware that waits at the hospital result in fewer ambulances being available to respond to emergency calls. ED triage nurses, in addition to determining acuity and prioritizing patients, are responsible for appropriate allocation of treatment space in the ED [13,14,15]. Hence, they require information that will enable them to predict the trajectory of patients and resources (staff and equipment) required.

Loss of information during transitions in care may lead to incorrect triage decisions in terms of acuity rating or prioritization of order to be examined by a physician, delayed time to treatment, or the patient being triaged to an inappropriate area of the ED [16, 17]. Ultimately, this impacts patient safety, patient flow, and the efficient and timely use of ED resources. Triage decisions determine a patient’s destination in the ED; therefore, the patient’s trajectory through the ED may be influenced by decisions made at triage. For instance, a patient who is erroneously triaged to a less acute area in the ED may be perceived as less urgent by the treating physician [16]. An effective triage system in which patients are accurately triaged is thus essential for the safety of patients who present to the ED, for managing patient flow through the ED, and for the appropriate use of ED resources [18,19,20,21].

Preliminary findings from two studies conducted by GR—one of decision-making by paramedics (in progress) and one of decision-making by ED triage nurses—indicate that EMS-triage nurse communication is problematic [15]. Paramedics expressed that triage nurses did not always trust them, that their professional knowledge and clinical expertise was at times disregarded, and that nurses did not adequately consider the patient information paramedics reported. Nurses did not fully trust information from EMS and, at times, felt they were given borderline misleading information in order for paramedics to be triaged faster [22]. Similar findings have been reported by others [23]. Mistrust was not always the case: some participants spoke of “good” paramedics and “good” triage nurses with whom they had an excellent working relationship. The outcome of mistrust is the potential for loss of vital patient information during the transition process at triage and at the bedside.

A related UK-based literature review [1] identified similar concerns about interprofessional relationships, particularly mistrust and misunderstandings between prehospital and hospital staff during transitions in care. Communication and information transfer were also susceptible to issues with context and environment. The review, however, was methodologically weak (e.g., risk of bias assessment and study characteristics are not detailed, limited dates and searches, no gray literature searches, focus on UK). Furthermore, this review did not focus on the factors that can improve the quality of transitions in care or evaluate the effectiveness of interventions to support transitions of care between EMS and ED nurses. To address these limitations and ensure that healthcare policy-makers have high quality evidence from which to make accurate decisions, we will conduct a comprehensive systematic review of studies that examine transitions in care between EMS practitioners and ED nurses.

Aim

The objectives of this systematic review are to assess factors that mitigate or improve transitions in care from EMS practitioners to ED nurses and to identify effective interventional strategies that lead to improvements in communication and a reduction in adverse events.

Methods

Design

Our review question goes beyond what works to understand the perceptions, attitudes, and beliefs of those directly involved in transitions in care. Based on a preliminary scoping search, we expect diverse observational and qualitative studies of transitions in care. As such, we will conduct a mixed systematic review (i.e., mixed studies or mixed methods review) [24, 25] by combining the findings of diverse primary studies within a single review to address overlapping review questions. This protocol adheres to the PRISMA-P statement [26] and has been registered with PROSPERO CRD42017068844.

Eligibility criteria

The questions of relevance are as follows:

  1. 1.

    What factors mitigate or improve transitions in care from EMS practitioners to ED nurses?

  2. 2.

    What interventional strategies lead to improvements in communication and a reduction in adverse events?

Participants

Studies will be eligible if they include EMS practitioners (paramedics, emergency medical technicians, registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, nurse practitioners) and/or ED nurses (registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, nurse practitioners) involved in transitions in care of EMS patients from the ambulance to the ED. Other modes of transfer can occur (e.g., from accompanying transfer nurse or physician); however, the aim of our review is to specifically examine transition in care form EMS practitioners to ED nurses as this is the most common route. If the study participants include other healthcare providers (e.g., physicians, allied health, unit clerk), we will include the study only if data for EMS practitioners and/or ED nurses are reported separately. We will exclude studies that report solely on transitions in care between EMS practitioners and the ED trauma team, physicians, allied health professionals, and unit clerks. Studies in which transitions in care occurs from police, peace officers, referring physicians, referring nurses, referring allied health professionals to triage nurses will also be excluded.

Interventions

If the study includes an intervention, it must focus on improving transitions in care from EMS to triage nurses or bedside nurses within hospital EDs, to be included. Studies that do not include an intervention are also eligible. Interventions may include, but will not be limited to standardized protocols for handover, checklists, mnemonics, automatic electronic data transfer, or communication skills training. Transition in care will be considered complete when ED triage or bedside nurses have assumed full care of the patient and EMS practitioners are no longer considered to be responsible for patient care.

Comparators

As this review is concerned with identifying transitional facilitators and barriers, we will include any comparator group or studies with no comparator.

Outcomes

We will include studies that examine the (1) experience and perceptions of transitions in care; (2) factors that mitigate or improve transitions in care; (3) quality of information exchanged between EMS practitioners and ED nurses; or (4) patient-level outcomes (clinical, satisfaction, patient-reported outcomes), provider- and team-level outcomes (satisfaction, time at triage, communication, teamwork), or system-level outcomes (medical errors, patient safety, quality of care, patient flow, costs) that are influenced by transitions in care. We will also report on any secondary outcomes described in the studies included in this review.

Study type

All English-language quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods primary studies will be included, without restriction by year, publication type, geographic location, or methodological quality. Systematic reviews and other knowledge syntheses, case studies, editorials, and discussions of transitions of care will be excluded.

Information sources and search strategy

We will search DARE, MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, CINAHL, and Joanna Briggs Institute EBP electronic databases from database inception for English-language publications. Gray literature will be searched for in databases (Proquest Dissertation and Theses Global, Web of Science Conference Proceedings Citation Index, OAIster, OpenGrey, Canadian Health Research Collection), relevant organizational websites (e.g., National Emergency Nurses Association, Paramedic Association of Canada, National Association of EMS Physicians), and consultations with clinicians. We will visually search the electronically available table of contents of key emergency nursing and EMS journals that are not indexed in two of the identified databases. The search strategy was developed by an information scientist (KAH). Table 1 provides the provisional search strategy for MEDLINE. We will search the reference lists and cited bys of included studies and will provide our final list of included studies to EMS and nursing experts in emergency medicine to identify any further studies for inclusions. Records will be exported to EndNote X8 to facilitate data management, removal of duplicates, and finding full texts.

Table 1 Provisional search strategy. Database(s): Ovid MEDLINE(R) Epub Ahead of Print, In-Process and other non-indexed citations, Ovid MEDLINE(R) Daily, and Ovid MEDLINE(R) 1946 to Present

Study selection

Prior to screening, we will conduct training and a calibration exercise with the review team to pilot and refine the screening tool in Excel. Titles/abstracts (level 1) will be independently screened by pairs of two reviewers. Disagreements will be resolved by a third reviewer. Full texts of potential studies (Level 2) will then be obtained and screening will be conducted in the same manner as level 1 screening.

Assessment of methodological quality/risk of bias in individual studies

The methodological quality of quantitative studies will be assessed using the Effective Public Health Practice Project Quality Assessment Tool [EPHPP; 29], which can be used to assess multiple study designs and has evidence of validity and reliability. [27] Each of six domains—selection bias, study design, confounders, blinding, data collection methods, and withdrawals and drop-outs—are rated as strong, moderate, weak, or not applicable. For qualitative studies, we will use the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist for Qualitative Research. [28] This coherent tool performs well in assessing intrinsic methodological quality. [29] Ten domains are assessed as yes, not, unclear, or not applicable: philosophy, objective, data collection, data analysis, interpretation of results, theory or cultural location, researcher reflexivity, participant representation, ethical considerations, conclusion. For mixed methods studies, we will use both appraisal tools. All studies will be independently assessed for quality by two reviewers, and disagreements will be resolved through discussion; if consensus cannot be reached, a third reviewer will break the tie. While we will report on the results of this quality assessment, studies will not be excluded on the basis of quality alone.

To assess confidence in the evidence in the syntheses, we will use the GRADE [30] (each quantitative outcome) and CERQual [31] (each qualitative review finding). GRADE and CERQual findings will be presented in a summary of findings table.

Data items and data extraction

Table 2 details the data items to be extracted from the full texts. We will use a template data extraction tool in Excel. After the review team conducts a calibration exercise with the extraction tool, one reviewer will extract study data; a second reviewer will verify the extracted data for accuracy. We will discuss discrepancies and consult a third reviewer if a discrepancy cannot be resolved through consensus. Studies that have been published in duplicate will be retained and assessed in full text; we will combine related papers from the same study and treat them as one study.

Table 2 Data extraction categories for eligible studies

Synthesis of included studies

Should the quantitative data permit, a meta-analysis will be conducted using a random effects model in RevMan (standardized mean differences for continuous outcomes; odds ratios for categorical outcomes; 95% confidence intervals). We expect considerable heterogeneity between studies; thus, meta-analysis may not be appropriate. In this case, we will aggregate the quantitative findings with the qualitative findings using data-based convergent synthesis [24], whereby one synthesis will be conducted with all studies after we transform the quantitative findings into textual categories or themes. Study characteristics will be tabulated (frequency, proportion), and narrative synthesis [32] will be used to integrate and explore relationships within the data. Where studies have substantial conceptual overlap, we will apply thematic analysis [33] in three stages to translate and integrate findings. Studies will be imported into NVivo 11 for coding. [34] First, two reviewers will inductively code first-order (verbatim participant accounts) and second-order interpretations (author observations) from the extracted data. Next, the initial codes will be compared between studies and grouped to generate initial descriptive themes. Finally, we will generate analytical themes by considering how the descriptive themes relate. Revisions to the coding framework will be recorded to provide an audit trail.

Subgroups and sensitivity considerations

Providing that there is sufficient information, we will consider comparisons of several subgroups: (1) study types, (2) paramedics and nurses, (3) different countries, (4) transitions in care at triage and bedside, and (5) barriers and facilitators. We will also conduct a sensitivity analysis to examine the influence of studies with a low quality rating on the robustness of review findings. [35, 36] To do this, our synthesis (with all studies) will be compared post hoc to a synthesis without the methodologically weak studies within NVivo 11 using source classifications/attributes. The criteria or threshold for low quality (e.g., data collection method, sampling) will be established a priori. This comparison can provide insight into whether the low quality studies contribute unique information and how they may impact the generalizability of the findings. [35]

Integrated knowledge translation

We are using an integrated knowledge translation [37] approach for this review. Our multidisciplinary team includes representative knowledge users who are frontline healthcare professionals, health system decision-makers, knowledge synthesis methodologist, information scientist, researchers (nursing, emergency medicine, EMS, health science), and trainees. Our team co-developed the review question and protocol and will continue to be involved throughout the entire process, including developing a knowledge translation plan to accelerate the uptake of the findings of the review. This strategy will detail the audiences, strategies with anticipated timing, key messages and activities, targeted venues, and measures of success. The findings of this review will be disseminated through multiple mechanisms: (1) open access publication; (2) presentations at targeted scientific conferences (e.g., Western Emergency Department Operations Conference); (3) presentations to provincial decision-makers and healthcare professionals through the Emergency Strategic Clinical Network; (4) meetings with EMS, manager, and nurse educators in local EDs; and (5) infographic representing meaningful information about transition in care. If indicated by the findings, this review will also inform the development of a communication transition tool to facilitate transfer of essential patient information in a consistent manner.

Discussion

The findings from this systematic review will result in an in-depth understanding of the factors and interventional strategies that lead to improved communication and decrease in adverse events. To date, although EMS and ED nurses generally exhibit good working relationships, there is also a level of mistrust and sense of not being heard [1, 2]. Our review findings can inform the potential design and development of an evidence-informed transitions in care tool that ensures efficient transfer of accurate patient information, continuity of care, enhances patient safety, and avoids duplication of services. A standardized research-based approach to transitions in care would ensure that there are clear expectations of what information should be communicated and how. Given that ED triage nurses control access to the ED and are responsible for assigning priority to be examined and treatment space to arriving patients [15], efficient and accurate transitions in care at the initial point of contact with the ED can improve flow and optimize the use of ED resources. Ultimately, a standardized approach to transitions in care ensures that patient expectations and needs are communicated, thereby making ED care more responsive to patient needs.

The potential heterogeneity of the literature including varying study designs, study quality, and outcomes reported may constrain our ability to draw consistent and clear conclusions on the outcomes. Regardless of study heterogeneity, this systematic review will provide a meaningful analysis regarding the existing evidence on transitions in care between EMS and ED nurses and identify areas for future research.

Abbreviations

CERQual:

Confidence in the Evidence from Reviews of Qualitative Research

ED:

Emergency Department

EMS:

Emergency Medical Services

EPHPP:

Effective Public Health Practice Project Quality Assessment Tool

GRADE:

Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation

References

  1. Wood K, Crouch R, Rowland E, Pope C. Clinical handovers between prehospital and hospital staff: literature review. Emerg Med J. 2014;32:577–81.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  2. Bost N, Crilly J, Patterson E, Chaboyer W. Clinical handover of patients arriving by ambulance to a hospital emergency department: a qualitative study. Int Emerg Nurs. 2012;20:133–41.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  3. Campbell B, Stirling C, Cummings E. Continuity matters: examining the ‘information gap’ in transfer from residential aged care, ambulance to emergency triage in southern Tasmania. Int Emerg Nurs. 2016;32:9–14.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  4. Beach C, Croskerry P, Shapiro M. Profiles in patient safety: emergency care transitions. Acad Emerg Med. 2003;10(4):364–7.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  5. Cheung DS, Kelly JJ, Beach C, Berkeley RP, Bitterman RA, Broida RI, Dalsey WC, Farley HL, Fuller DC, Garvey DJ, et al. Improving handoffs in the emergency department. Acad Emerg Med. 2010;55(2):171–80.

    Google Scholar 

  6. Bost N, Crilly J, Wallis M, Patterson E, Chaboyer W. Clinical handover of patients arriving by ambulance to the emergency department—a literature review. Int Emerg Nurs. 2010;18(4):210–20.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  7. Bruce K, Suserud BO. The handover process and triage of ambulance-borne patients: the experiences of emergency nurses. Nurs Crit Care. 2005;10(4):201–9.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  8. Wilson R. Improving Clincal handovers in emergency departments. Emerg Nurse. 2011;19(1):22–6.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  9. Ye K, Taylor MD, Knott JC, Dent A, MacBean CE. Handover in the emergency department: deficiencies and adverse effects. Emerg Med Australas. 2007;19:433–41.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  10. Arbon P, Zeitz K, Ranse J, Wren H, Elliott R, Driscoll K. The reality of multiple casualty triage: putting triage theory into practice at the scene of multiple casualty vehicular accidents. Emerg Med J. 2008;25(4):230–4.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Barnett AS, Wang NE, Sahni R, Hsia RY, Haukoos JS, Barton ED, Holmes JF, Newgard CD. Investigators tW: variation in prehospital use and uptake of the National Field Triage Decision Scheme. Prehosp Emerg Care. 2013;17(2):135–48.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  12. Jones CMC, Cushman JT, Lerner EB, Fisher SG, Seplaki CL, Veazie PJ, Wasserman EB, Dozier A, Shah MN. Prehospital trauma triage decision-making: a model of what happens between the 9-1-1 call and the hospital. Prehosp Emerg Care. 2016;20(1):6–14.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  13. Edwards B, Sines D. Passing the audition—the appraisal of client credibility and assessment by nurses at triage. J Clin Nurs. 2008;17(18):2444–51.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  14. Hodge A, Hugman A, Varndell W, Howes K. A review of the quality assurance processes for the Australasian triage scale (ATS) and implications for future practice. Australas Emerg Nurs J. 2013;16(1):21–9.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  15. Reay G, Rankin JA, Then KL. Momentary fitting in a fluid environment: a grounded theory of triage nurse decision making. Int Emerg Nurs. 2016;26:8–13.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  16. Croskerry P. Achieving quality in clinical decision making: cognitive strategies and detection of bias. Acad Emerg Med. 2002;9(11):1184–204.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  17. Bost N, Crilly J, Patterson E, Chaboyer W. Clinical handover of patients arriving by ambulance to a hospital emergency department: a qualitative study. Int Emerg Nurs. 2012;20(3):133–41.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  18. Fernandes C, Wuerz R, Clark S, Djurdjev O. How reliable is emergency department triage? Ann Emerg Med. 1999;34(2):141–7.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  19. FitzGerald G, Jelinek GA, Scott D, Gerdtz MF. Emergency department triage revisited. Emerg Med J. 2010;27(2):86–92.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  20. Wuerz R, Fernandes C, Alarcon J. Inconsistency of emergency department triage. Ann Emerg Med. 1998;32(4):431–5.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  21. Göransson KE, Ehnfors M, Fonteyn ME, Ehrenberg A. Thinking strategies used by registered nurses during emergency department triage. J Adv Nurs. 2008;61(2):163–72.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  22. Reay G. Momentary fitting in a fluid environment: a grounded theory of triage nurse decision making. Calgary, Alberta: University of Calgary; 2014.

    Google Scholar 

  23. Di Delupis DF, Pisanelli P, Di Luccio G, Kennedy M, Tellini S, Nenci N, Guerrini E, Pini R, Gensini GF. Communication during handover in the pre-hospital/hospital interface in Italy: from evaluation to implementation of multidisciplinary training through high-fidelity simulation. Int Emerg Med. 2014;9:575–82.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  24. Hong QN, Pluye P, Bujold M, Wassef M. Convergent and sequential synthesis designs: implications for conducting and reporting systematic reviews of qualitative and quantitative evidence. Syst Rev. 2017;6(1):61.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  25. Pluye P, Hong QN. Combining the power of stories and the power of numbers: mixed methods research and mixed studies reviews. Annu Rev Public Health. 2014;35:29–45.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  26. Moher D, Shamseer L, Clarke M, Ghersi D, Liberati A, Petticrew M, Shekelle P, Stewart LA, Group P-P. Preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis protocols (PRISMA-P) 2015 statement. Syst Rev. 2015;4(1):1.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  27. Thomas BH, Ciliska D, Dobbins M, Micucci S. A process for systematically reviewing the literature: providing the research evidence for public health nursing interventions. Worldviews Evid-Based Nurs. 2004;1(3):176–84.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  28. Joanna Briggs Institute: JBI critical appraisal checklist for qualitative research. 2016.

    Google Scholar 

  29. Hannes K, Lockwood C, Pearson A. A comparative analysis of three online appraisal instruments' ability to assess validity in qualitative research. Qual Health Res. 2010;20(12):1736–43.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  30. Guyatt GH, Oxman AD, Vist GE, Kunz R, Falck-Ytter Y, Alonso-Coello P, Schunemann HJ. GRADE: an emerging consensus on rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. BMJ. 2008;336(7650):924–6.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  31. Lewin S, Glenton C, Munthe-Kaas H, Carlsen B, Colvin CJ, Gulmezoglu M, Noyes J, Booth A, Garside R, Rashidian A. Using qualitative evidence in decision making for health and social interventions: an approach to assess confidence in findings from qualitative evidence syntheses (GRADE-CERQual). PLoS Med. 2015;12(10):e1001895.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  32. Popay J, Roberts H, Sowden A, Petticrew M, Arai L, Rodgers M, Britten N. Guidance on the conduct of narrative synthesis in systematic reviews. In ESRC Research Methods Programme. Lancaster: Lancaster University; 2006.

  33. Thomas J, Harden A. Methods for the thematic synthesis of qualitative research in systematic reviews. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2008;8:45.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  34. Houghton C, Murphy K, Meehan B, Thomas J, Brooker D, Casey D. From screening to synthesis: using nvivo to enhance transparency in qualitative evidence synthesis. J Clin Nurs. 2017;26(5–6):873–81.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  35. Carroll C, Booth A. Quality assessment of qualitative evidence for systematic review and synthesis: is it meaningful, and if so, how should it be performed? Res Synth Methods. 2015;6(2):149–54.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  36. Boeije HR, van Wesel F, Alisic E. Making a difference: towards a method for weighing the evidence in a qualitative synthesis. J Eval Clin Pract. 2011;17(4):657–63.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  37. Graham ID, Tetroe JM, McLean RK. Chapter 1: some basics of integrated knowledge translation research in: Turning Knowledge into Action: Practical Guidance on How to do Integrated Knowledge Translation Research. Edn. Edited by Graham ID, Tetroe JM, Pearson a. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2014.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

Not applicable.

Funding

This review was funded through an Emergency Strategic Clinical Network Systematic Review Grant from Alberta Health Services. The funder had no role in the development of this protocol.

Availability of data and materials

The datasets created and/or analyzed during this review will be available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request. Datasets include database searches, compiled search results, quality appraisal of eligible studies, and extracted data from eligible studies.

Author’s contributions

GR, JMN conceived the study. GR, JMN, KAH, JA, KY, GCL, and ESL designed the review and acquired funding. KAH and JMN created the search strategy. GR, JMN, and LN drafted the protocol. All authors read, edited, and approved the final manuscript.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Gudrun Reay.

Ethics declarations

Ethics approval and consent to participate

Not applicable.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Reay, G., Norris, J.M., Alix Hayden, K. et al. Transition in care from paramedics to emergency department nurses: a systematic review protocol. Syst Rev 6, 260 (2017). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/s13643-017-0651-z

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/s13643-017-0651-z

Keywords