Centre for Primary Care and Public Health, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.
Centre for Academic Primary Care, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Health Soc Care Community. 2019 Jul;27(4):e298-e312. doi: 10.1111/hsc.12733. Epub 2019 Mar 13.
Identification and Referral to Improve Safety (IRIS) is a training and support programme to improve the response to domestic violence and abuse (DVA) in general practice. Following a pragmatic cluster-randomised trial, IRIS has been implemented in over 30 administrative localities in the UK. The trial and local evaluations of the IRIS implementation showed an increase in referrals from general practice to third sector DVA services with a variation in the referral rates within and across practices. Using Normalisation Process Theory (NPT), we aimed to understand the reasons for such variability by identifying factors that influenced the implementation of IRIS in the National Health Service (NHS). We conducted a mixed-method process evaluation which included: (a) a case study (100 hr of participant observation, 19 interviews); (b) a survey (n = 118); (c) qualitative analysis of free-text comments from the survey; (d) qualitative interviews (n = 8); (e) document review (n = 44). Data were collected from NHS and third sector staff across five London boroughs from August 2015 to December 2017, analysed descriptively and thematically and triangulated using the NPT constructs coherence, cognitive participation, collection action and reflexive monitoring. The survey showed wide variation in the extent to which practice staff saw IRIS as a normal part of their daily work. Qualitative data and documents illuminated drivers of DVA work, implementation barriers and suggested solutions. The drivers were related to individual professional's characteristics and relationships. The barriers were linked to the differing sense-making and legitimisation of DVA work and differing contexts between the NHS and third sector. Solutions were adaptations to IRIS relative to these contextual differences. The suggested solutions can be used to update IRIS commissioning guidance, training for trainers and training for general practice. The updates should reflect the importance of ongoing support of IRIS from practice leads and commissioners, extended funding periods for IRIS and continuity of the IRIS team.
识别和转介以提高安全性(IRIS)是一个培训和支持计划,旨在改善全科实践中对家庭暴力和虐待(DVA)的反应。经过一项实用的集群随机试验,IRIS 已在英国的 30 多个行政区实施。IRIS 实施的试验和地方评估表明,向第三方 DVA 服务机构的转介从全科医生那里有所增加,而且在实践内部和之间的转介率有所不同。我们使用规范化进程理论(NPT),通过确定影响国家卫生服务(NHS)中 IRIS 实施的因素,旨在了解这种可变性的原因。我们进行了一项混合方法的过程评估,其中包括:(a)案例研究(100 小时的参与者观察,19 次访谈);(b)调查(n=118);(c)对调查的自由文本评论进行定性分析;(d)定性访谈(n=8);(e)文件审查(n=44)。数据于 2015 年 8 月至 2017 年 12 月从五个伦敦自治市的 NHS 和第三方工作人员中收集,使用 NPT 构建的一致性、认知参与、集合行动和反思性监测进行描述性和主题分析,并进行三角测量。调查显示,实践工作人员将 IRIS 视为日常工作正常组成部分的程度存在很大差异。定性数据和文件阐明了家庭暴力工作的驱动力、实施障碍并提出了解决方案。这些驱动力与个人专业人员的特点和关系有关。障碍与 DVA 工作的不同意义和合法化以及 NHS 和第三方之间的不同背景有关。解决方案是针对这些背景差异对 IRIS 进行调整。可以使用这些解决方案来更新 IRIS 委托指南、培训培训师和培训全科医生。更新内容应反映出实践负责人和委托人为 IRIS 提供持续支持、延长 IRIS 的供资期限以及保持 IRIS 团队的连续性的重要性。