Harvey Gill, Llewellyn Sue, Maniatopoulos Greg, Boyd Alan, Procter Rob
Adelaide Nursing School, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia.
Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester, Booth Street East, Manchester, M13 9SS, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2018 May 10;18(1):347. doi: 10.1186/s12913-018-3176-9.
Accelerating the implementation of new technology in healthcare is typically complex and multi-faceted. One strategy is to charge a national agency with the responsibility for facilitating implementation. This study examines the role of such an agency in the English National Health Service. In particular, it compares two different facilitation strategies employed by the agency to support the implementation of insulin pump therapy.
The research involved an empirical case study of four healthcare organisations receiving different levels of facilitation from the national agency: two received active hands-on facilitation; one was the intended recipient of a more passive, web-based facilitation strategy; the other implemented the technology without any external facilitation. The primary method of data collection was semi-structured qualitative interviews with key individuals involved in implementation. The integrated-PARIHS framework was applied as a conceptual lens to analyse the data.
The two sites that received active facilitation from an Implementation Manager in the national agency made positive progress in implementing the technology. In both sites there was a high level of initial receptiveness to implementation. This was similar to a site that had successfully introduced insulin pump therapy without facilitation support from the national agency. By contrast, a site that did not have direct contact with the national agency made little progress with implementation, despite the availability of a web-based implementation resource. Clinicians expressed differences of opinion around the value and effectiveness of the technology and contextual barriers related to funding for implementation persisted. The national agency's intended roll out strategy using passive web-based facilitation appeared to have little impact.
When favourable conditions exist, in terms of agreement around the value of the technology, clinician receptiveness and motivation to change, active facilitation via an external agency can help to structure the implementation process and address contextual barriers. Passive facilitation using web-based implementation resources appears less effective. Moving from initial implementation to wider scale-up presents challenges and is an issue that warrants further attention.
加快医疗保健领域新技术的实施通常复杂且涉及多方面。一种策略是赋予国家机构促进实施的职责。本研究考察了这样一个机构在英国国民医疗服务体系中的作用。具体而言,它比较了该机构为支持胰岛素泵疗法的实施所采用的两种不同促进策略。
该研究涉及对四个医疗保健组织的实证案例研究,这些组织从国家机构获得了不同程度的促进:两个组织得到了积极的实际操作促进;一个原本是更被动的基于网络的促进策略的接受者;另一个在没有任何外部促进的情况下实施了该技术。数据收集的主要方法是对参与实施的关键人员进行半结构化定性访谈。综合的PARIHS框架被用作分析数据的概念视角。
从国家机构的实施经理那里获得积极促进的两个场所,在实施该技术方面取得了积极进展。在这两个场所,对实施都有很高的初始接受度。这与一个在没有国家机构促进支持的情况下成功引入胰岛素泵疗法的场所类似。相比之下,一个没有与国家机构直接接触的场所,尽管有基于网络的实施资源,但在实施方面进展甚微。临床医生对该技术的价值和有效性表达了不同意见,与实施资金相关的背景障碍仍然存在。国家机构使用基于网络的被动促进的预期推广策略似乎影响甚微。
当存在有利条件时,即在围绕技术价值、临床医生接受度和变革动力达成一致的情况下,通过外部机构进行积极促进有助于构建实施过程并解决背景障碍。使用基于网络的实施资源进行被动促进似乎效果较差。从初始实施转向更广泛的推广面临挑战,这是一个值得进一步关注的问题。