Sauto Arce Regina, De Ormijana Amaia Saenz, Orueta Juan F, Gagnon Marie-Pierre, Nuño-Solinís Roberto
O + berri, Basque Institute for Healthcare Innovation, Torre del BEC, Ronda de Azkue, 1, 48902 Barakaldo, Bizkaia, Spain.
BMC Fam Pract. 2014 Sep 8;15:150. doi: 10.1186/1471-2296-15-150.
A prospective Population Risk Stratification (PRS) tool was first introduced in the public Basque Health Service in 2011, at the level of its several Primary Care (PC) practices. This paper aims at exploring the new tool's implementation process, as experienced by its potential adopters/users, ie. PC clinicians (doctors and nurses). Findings could help guide future PRS implementation strategies.
Three focus groups exploring clinicians' opinions and experiences related to the PRS tool and its implementation in their daily practice were conducted. A purposive sample of 12 General Practitioners and 11 PC nurses participated in the groups. Discussions were digitally recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed by two independent researchers using thematic analysis based on Graham et al.'s Knowledge Translation Theory.
Exploring PC clinicians' experience with the new PRS tool, allowed us to identify certain elements working as barriers and facilitators in its implementation process. This series of closely interrelated elements, which emerged as relevant in building up the complex implementation process of the new tool, as experienced by the clinicians, can be grouped into four domains: 1) clinicians' characteristics as potential adopters, 2) clinicians' perceptions of their practice settings where PRS is to implemented, 3) clinicians' perceptions of the tool, and 4) the implementation strategy used by the PRS promoter.
Lessons from the implementation process under study point at the need to frame the implementation of a new PRS tool within a wider strategy encouraging PC clinicians to orientate their daily practice towards a population health approach. The PRS tool could also improve the perceived utility by its potential adopters, by bringing it closer to the clinicians' needs and practice, and allowing it to become context-sensitive. This would require clinicians being involved from the earliest phases of conceptualisation, design and implementation of the new tool, and mounting efforts to improve communication between clinicians and tool promoters.Graham et al.'s Knowledge Translation Theory proved a suitable framework to explore the implementation process of a new PRS tool in the public Basque Health Service's PC practice, and hence to identify implementation barriers and facilitators as experienced by the clinicians.
2011年,一种前瞻性人群风险分层(PRS)工具首次在巴斯克公共卫生服务机构的多个基层医疗(PC)机构层面引入。本文旨在探讨该新工具的实施过程,这是其潜在采用者/使用者(即PC临床医生(医生和护士))所经历的。研究结果有助于指导未来的PRS实施策略。
开展了三个焦点小组,探讨临床医生对PRS工具及其在日常实践中实施的看法和经验。12名全科医生和11名PC护士的目的抽样参与了这些小组。讨论进行了数字录音,逐字转录,并由两名独立研究人员根据格雷厄姆等人的知识转化理论进行主题分析。
通过探索PC临床医生使用新PRS工具的经验,我们能够确定在其实施过程中作为障碍和促进因素的某些要素。这一系列密切相关的要素在构建新工具的复杂实施过程中显得至关重要,临床医生所经历的这些要素可分为四个领域:1)作为潜在采用者的临床医生特征,2)临床医生对要实施PRS的实践环境的看法,3)临床医生对该工具的看法,4)PRS推广者使用的实施策略。
所研究的实施过程中的经验教训表明,需要在更广泛的策略中构建新PRS工具的实施,鼓励PC临床医生将其日常实践导向人群健康方法。PRS工具还可以通过使其更贴近临床医生的需求和实践,并使其具有情境敏感性,来提高潜在采用者对其的感知效用。这将需要临床医生从新工具的概念化、设计和实施的最早阶段就参与进来,并加大努力改善临床医生与工具推广者之间的沟通。事实证明,格雷厄姆等人的知识转化理论是探索新PRS工具在巴斯克公共卫生服务机构的PC实践中的实施过程的合适框架,从而确定临床医生所经历的实施障碍和促进因素。