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Delphi guideline establishes sepsis care quality indicators for Chinese emergency and ICU settings

Delphi guideline establishes sepsis care quality indicators for Chinese emergency and ICU settings
Photo by J. Weisner / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Consider this Delphi-derived indicator set for sepsis care quality evaluation in Chinese emergency and ICU settings.

This is a mixed-methods Delphi guideline that aimed to develop quality indicators for sepsis management in Chinese emergency departments and ICUs. The process combined a systematic literature review, semi-structured interviews with clinical experts, and a modified Delphi process with a multidisciplinary panel.

The authors synthesized expert consensus to establish a comprehensive list of sensitive indicators for sepsis care quality. This list includes three primary, nine secondary, and 30 tertiary indicators. The expert consultation return rate was 100%. The expert authority coefficient (Cr) was a mean score of 0.95 in the first round and 0.96 in the second round, with a threshold of Cr ≥ 0.7. The coordination coefficient (Kendall W) was 0.120-0.316 in the first round and 0.116–0.142 in the second round, with p < 0.001 for both rounds, indicating significant consensus.

The authors note that this is a guideline development study and does not establish causality. The certainty of the findings is limited to the consensus achieved through the Delphi process. A key limitation is that the indicators are for care quality evaluation and are not validated for clinical outcomes. The framework's applicability outside China requires further evidence.

The practice relevance is that this research provides a valuable framework for evaluating clinical care quality in sepsis management within the specified Chinese settings.

Study Details

Study typeGuideline
EvidenceLevel 5
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
BackgroundThe development of care-sensitive quality indicators represents an essential component of care management. Currently, there exists no objective, scientific, and sensitive assessment framework for evaluating sepsis care quality management in China.Methods and designThis mixed-methods investigation employed a three-phase design. Initially, a systematic literature review (2014–2024) across four databases identified evidence regarding sepsis care quality. Subsequently, semi-structured interviews were conducted with five clinical experts from emergency departments and intensive care units (ICUs) to examine their perspectives on nursing-sensitive quality indicators (NSQIs). Finally, a modified Delphi process engaged a multidisciplinary panel to refine and validate sepsis-specific NSQIs through systematic consensus-building.ResultsTwo rounds of expert consultation were completed with a questionnaire return rate of 100%. Sixteen experts, consisting of 10 nurses and 6 physicians, participated in the first and second rounds of the Delphi survey, respectively. The mean score of the expert authority coefficient Cr for the two rounds was 0.95 and 0.96 (Cr ≥ 0.7). The coordination coefficient (Kendall W) was 0.120-0.316 (p < 0.001) in the first round and 0.116–0.142 (p < 0.001) in the second round, both of which reached a significant consensus. A comprehensive list of sensitive indicators for sepsis care quality was established, encompassing three primary, nine secondary, and 30 tertiary indicators.ConclusionThe established NSQIs encompass three fundamental dimensions of sepsis care quality: importance, rationality, and feasibility.Clinical practice implicationsThis research provides a valuable framework for evaluating clinical care quality in sepsis management.
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