Graduate Entry Medical School, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland.
Professor of Primary Healthcare Research, Graduate Entry Medical School, And Health Research Institute, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2019 Jul 23;19(1):515. doi: 10.1186/s12913-019-4331-7.
Many international health policies recognise the World Health Organization's (2008) vision that communities should be involved in shaping primary healthcare services. However, researchers continue to debate definitions, models, and operational challenges to community participation. Furthermore, there has been no use of implementation theory to study how community participation is introduced and embedded in primary healthcare in order to generate insights and transferrable lessons for making this so. Using Normalisation Process Theory (NPT) as a conceptual framework, this qualitative study was designed to explore the levers and barriers to the implementation of community participation in primary healthcare as a routine way of working.
We conducted two qualitative studies based on a national Initiative designed to support community participation in primary care in Ireland. We had a combined multi-stakeholder purposeful sample (n = 72), utilising documentary evidence (study 1), semi-structured interviews (studies 1 and 2) and focus groups (study 2). Data generation and analysis were informed by Participatory Learning and Action (PLA) Research Methodology and NPT.
For many stakeholders, community participation in primary healthcare was a new way of working. Stakeholders did not always have a clear, shared understanding of the aims, objectives and benefits of this way of working and getting involved in a specific project sometimes provided this clarity. Drivers/champions, and strong working partnerships, were considered integral to its initiation and implementation. Participants emphasised the benefits of funding, organisational support, training and networking to enact relevant activities. Health-promoting activities and healthcare consultation/information events were generally successful, but community representation on interdisciplinary Primary Care Teams proved more challenging. Overall, participants were broadly positive about the impacts of community participation, but were concerned about the scope to sustain the work without the 'protected' space and resources that the national Initiative afforded.
Despite the success of specific activities undertaken as part of a community process in Irish primary healthcare, the likelihood of this becoming a routine way of working in Ireland is low. Analysing the learning from this process using NPT provides theoretically informed recommendations that are transferrable to other settings and can be used to prospectively design and formatively evaluate community participation processes.
许多国际卫生政策都认识到世界卫生组织(2008 年)的愿景,即社区应参与塑造初级卫生保健服务。然而,研究人员仍在继续争论社区参与的定义、模式和实施挑战。此外,为了深入了解和可推广经验,以实现这一目标,还没有使用实施理论来研究社区参与如何被引入和融入初级卫生保健。本研究使用常规化进程理论(NPT)作为概念框架,旨在探讨将社区参与作为常规工作方式引入和融入初级卫生保健的推动因素和障碍。
我们开展了两项基于爱尔兰国家倡议的定性研究,旨在支持社区参与初级保健。我们采用了多利益攸关方有目的的组合样本(n=72),利用文件证据(研究 1)、半结构化访谈(研究 1 和 2)和焦点小组(研究 2)。数据生成和分析受到参与式学习和行动(PLA)研究方法和 NPT 的启发。
对许多利益攸关方来说,社区参与初级卫生保健是一种新的工作方式。利益攸关方并不总是对这种工作方式的目的、目标和好处有明确、共同的理解,参与特定项目有时会提供这种明确性。推动者/拥护者和强有力的工作伙伴关系被认为是其启动和实施的关键因素。参与者强调资金、组织支持、培训和网络联系对于实施相关活动的重要性。健康促进活动和医疗咨询/信息活动通常是成功的,但社区代表在跨学科初级保健团队中的代表性则更具挑战性。总的来说,参与者对社区参与的影响持普遍积极的态度,但他们担心,如果没有国家倡议提供的“受保护”空间和资源,这项工作能否持续下去。
尽管在爱尔兰初级卫生保健中开展的社区进程的特定活动取得了成功,但该活动在爱尔兰成为常规工作方式的可能性很低。使用 NPT 分析这一过程中的学习为其他环境提供了理论上的建议,可用于前瞻性设计和形成性评估社区参与进程。