Department of Mental Health Nursing, Florence Nightingale School of Nursing, Midwifery and Palliative Care, King's College London, James Clerk Maxwell Building, 57 Waterloo Road, London, SE1 8WA, UK.
Adult Nursing Department, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery and Palliative Care, King's College London, London, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2019 Jul 8;19(1):457. doi: 10.1186/s12913-019-4311-y.
Schwartz Center Rounds® (henceforce Rounds) were developed in the United States (US) in 1995 to provide a regular, structured time and safe place for staff to meet to share the emotional, psychological and social challenges of working in healthcare. Rounds were adopted in the United Kingdom (UK) in 2009 and have been subsequently implemented in over 180 healthcare organisations. Using Rounds as a case study, we aim to inform current debates around maintaining fidelity when an intervention developed in one country is transferred and implemented in another.
Interpretive design using nine qualitative interviews (UK = 3, US = 6) and four focus groups (UK: Focus group 1 (4 participants), Focus group 2 (5 participants; US: focus group 1 (5 participants) focus group 2 (2 participants) with participants involved in Rounds design and implementation, for example, programme architects, senior leaders, mentors and trainers. We also conducted non-participant observations of Rounds (UK = 42: USA = 2) and training days (UK = 2). Data were analysed using thematic analysis.
We identified four core and seven sub-core Rounds components, based upon the US design, and seven peripheral components, based on our US and UK fieldwork. We found high core component fidelity and examples of UK adaptations. We identified six strategies used to maintain high fidelity during Rounds transfer and implementation from the US to UK settings: i) having a legal contract between the two national bodies overseeing implementation, ii) requiring adopting UK healthcare organisations to sign a contract with the national body, iii) piloting the intervention in the UK context, iv) emphasising the credibility of the intervention, v) promoting and evaluating Rounds, and vi) providing implementation support and infrastructure.
This study identifies how fidelity to the core components of a particular intervention was maintained during transfer from one country to another by identifying six strategies which participants argued had enhanced fidelity during transfer of Rounds to a different country, with contractual agreements and legitimacy of intervention sources key. Potential disadvantages include limitations to further innovation and adaptation.
Schwartz Center Rounds®(下文简称 Rounds)于 1995 年在美国开发,旨在为员工提供一个定期、结构化的时间和安全场所,让他们相聚分享在医疗保健工作中的情感、心理和社会挑战。2009 年,英国采用了 Rounds,并随后在 180 多家医疗机构实施。我们选择 Rounds 作为案例研究,旨在为当前关于在一个国家开发的干预措施转移到另一个国家实施时保持保真度的辩论提供信息。
采用解释性设计,进行了 9 次定性访谈(英国 3 次,美国 6 次)和 4 次焦点小组(英国:焦点小组 1(4 名参与者),焦点小组 2(5 名参与者;美国:焦点小组 1(5 名参与者),焦点小组 2(2 名参与者),参与者涉及 Rounds 的设计和实施,例如计划架构师、高级领导、导师和培训师。我们还对 Rounds(英国 42 次:美国 2 次)和培训日(英国 2 次)进行了非参与观察。使用主题分析对数据进行分析。
我们确定了基于美国设计的四个核心和七个子核心 Rounds 组成部分,以及基于我们在美国和英国的实地工作的七个外围组成部分。我们发现核心组成部分的保真度很高,并且有英国的适应实例。我们确定了在从美国向英国环境转移和实施 Rounds 期间保持高度保真度的六种策略:i)在监督实施的两个国家机构之间签订法律合同,ii)要求采用英国医疗机构与国家机构签订合同,iii)在英国背景下试点干预措施,iv)强调干预措施的可信度,v)推广和评估 Rounds,以及 vi)提供实施支持和基础设施。
这项研究通过确定参与者认为在将 Rounds 转移到另一个国家时增强了保真度的六种策略,确定了在从一个国家转移到另一个国家时如何保持特定干预措施的核心组成部分的保真度,其中合同协议和干预措施来源的合法性是关键。潜在的缺点包括进一步创新和适应的局限性。