Laur Celia, Corrado Ann Marie, Grimshaw Jeremy M, Ivers Noah
Women's College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care, and Women's College Research Institute, Women's College Hospital, 76 Grenville Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The Peter Gilgan Centre for Women's Cancers, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Implement Sci Commun. 2021 Apr 1;2(1):35. doi: 10.1186/s43058-021-00137-6.
Quality improvement (QI) evaluations rarely consider how a successful intervention can be sustained long term, nor how to spread or scale to other locations. A survey of authors of randomized trials of diabetes QI interventions included in an ongoing systematic review found that 78% of trials reported improved quality of care, but 40% of these trials were not sustained. This study explores why and how the effective interventions were sustained, spread, or scaled.
A qualitative approach was used, focusing on case examples. Diabetes QI program trial authors were purposefully sampled and recruited for telephone interviews. Authors were eligible if they had completed the author survey, agreed to follow-up, and had a completed a diabetes QI trial they deemed "effective." Snowball sampling was used if the participant identified someone who could provide a different perspective on the same trial. Interviews were transcribed verbatim. Inductive thematic analysis was conducted to identify barriers and facilitators to sustainability, spread, and/or scale of the QI program, using case examples to show trajectories across projects and people.
Eleven of 44 eligible trialists participated in an interview. Four reported that the intervention was "sustained" and nine were "spread," however, interviews highlighted that these terms were interpreted differently over time and between participants. Participant stories highlighted the varied trajectories of how projects evolved and how some research careers adapted to increase impact. Three interacting themes, termed the "3C's," helped explain the variation in sustainability, spread, and scale: (i) understanding the concepts of implementation, sustainability, sustainment, spread, and scale; (ii) having the appropriate competencies; and (iii) the need for individual, organizational, and system capacity.
Challenges in defining sustainability, spread and scale make it difficult to fully understand impact. However, it is clear that from the beginning of intervention design, trialists need to understand the concepts and have the competency and capacity to plan for feasible and sustainable interventions that have potential to be sustained, spread and/or scaled if found to be effective.
质量改进(QI)评估很少考虑如何长期维持成功的干预措施,也不考虑如何推广或扩大到其他地点。对一项正在进行的系统评价中纳入的糖尿病QI干预随机试验的作者进行的一项调查发现,78%的试验报告护理质量有所改善,但其中40%的试验未能持续下去。本研究探讨有效干预措施得以维持、推广或扩大的原因及方式。
采用定性方法,重点关注案例。有目的地抽取并招募糖尿病QI项目试验的作者进行电话访谈。如果作者完成了作者调查、同意随访且完成了一项他们认为“有效”的糖尿病QI试验,则符合入选条件。如果参与者识别出能对同一试验提供不同观点的人,则采用滚雪球抽样法。访谈内容逐字记录。进行归纳主题分析,以确定QI项目可持续性、推广和/或扩大的障碍及促进因素,用案例展示项目和人员的发展轨迹。
44名符合条件的试验者中有11人参与了访谈。4人报告干预措施“得以维持”,9人报告“得到推广”,然而,访谈强调这些术语在不同时间和参与者之间有不同的解释。参与者的故事突出了项目发展的不同轨迹以及一些研究人员的职业生涯如何适应以增加影响力。三个相互作用的主题,称为“3C”,有助于解释可持续性、推广和扩大方面的差异:(i)理解实施、可持续性、维持、推广和扩大的概念;(ii)具备适当的能力;(iii)个人、组织和系统能力的需求。
定义可持续性、推广和扩大方面的挑战使得难以全面理解其影响。然而,很明显,从干预设计之初,试验者就需要理解这些概念,并具备规划可行且可持续干预措施的能力和资质,这些干预措施如果被证明有效,就有可能得以维持、推广和/或扩大。