The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Ultimo, NSW, 2007, Australia.
Menzies Centre for Health Policy, School of Public Health, and University Centre for Rural Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, 2006, Australia.
Implement Sci. 2019 Sep 18;14(1):91. doi: 10.1186/s13012-019-0938-7.
Bespoke electronic information management systems are being used for large-scale implementation delivery of population health programs. They record sites reached, coordinate activity, and track target achievement. However, many systems have been abandoned or failed to integrate into practice. We investigated the unusual endurance of an electronic information management system that has supported the successful statewide implementation of two evidence-based childhood obesity prevention programs for over 5 years. Upwards of 80% of implementation targets are being achieved.
We undertook co-designed partnership research with policymakers, practitioners, and IT designers. Our working hypothesis was that the science of getting evidence-based programs into practice rests on an in-depth understanding of the role programs play in the ongoing system of local relationships and multiple accountabilities. We conducted a 12-month multisite ethnography of 14 implementation teams, including their use of an electronic information management system, the Population Health Information Management System (PHIMS).
All teams used PHIMS, but also drew on additional informal tools and technologies to manage, curate, and store critical information for implementation. We identified six functions these tools performed: (1) relationship management, (2) monitoring progress towards target achievement, (3) guiding and troubleshooting PHIMS use, (4) supporting teamwork, (5) evaluation, and (6) recording extra work at sites not related to program implementation. Informal tools enabled practitioners to create locally derived implementation knowledge and provided a conduit between knowledge generation and entry into PHIMS.
Implementation involves knowing and formalizing what to do, as well as how to do it. Our ethnography revealed the importance of hitherto uncharted knowledge about how practitioners develop implementation knowledge about how to do implementation locally, within the context of scaling up. Harnessing this knowledge for local use required adaptive and flexible systems which were enabled by informal tools and technologies. The use of informal tools also complemented and supported PHIMS use suggesting that both informal and standardized systems are required to support coordinated, large-scale implementation. While the content of the supplementary knowledge required to deliver the program was specific to context, functions like managing relationships with sites and helping others in the team may be applicable elsewhere.
定制电子信息管理系统正被用于大规模实施人群健康计划。这些系统记录已覆盖的地点、协调活动,并跟踪目标的实现情况。然而,许多系统已被废弃或未能融入实践。我们研究了一种不同寻常的电子信息管理系统,它支持两个基于证据的儿童肥胖预防计划在全州范围内成功实施超过 5 年。目前实现了 80%以上的实施目标。
我们与政策制定者、实践者和 IT 设计师合作开展了联合设计的伙伴关系研究。我们的工作假设是,将基于证据的方案付诸实践的科学取决于对方案在当地关系和多重责任的持续系统中所扮演角色的深入理解。我们对 14 个实施团队进行了为期 12 个月的多地点民族志研究,包括他们对人口健康信息管理系统(PHIMS)的使用。
所有团队都使用 PHIMS,但也利用额外的非正式工具和技术来管理、策划和存储实施所需的关键信息。我们确定了这些工具执行的六个功能:(1)关系管理;(2)监测目标实现进度;(3)指导和解决 PHIMS 使用问题;(4)支持团队合作;(5)评估;(6)记录与方案实施无关的地点的额外工作。非正式工具使实践者能够创建本地派生的实施知识,并在知识生成和输入 PHIMS 之间提供一个渠道。
实施涉及了解和规范化要做什么,以及如何去做。我们的民族志揭示了以前未知的知识的重要性,即实践者如何在扩大规模的背景下,在当地发展实施知识。为了本地使用,需要适应性强且灵活的系统,这是由非正式工具和技术实现的。非正式工具的使用也补充和支持了 PHIMS 的使用,这表明需要非正式和标准化系统来支持协调、大规模的实施。虽然交付方案所需的补充知识的内容特定于背景,但像管理与地点的关系和帮助团队中的其他人等功能可能适用于其他地方。