Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Centerstone Research Institute, Nashville, TN, USA.
Transl Behav Med. 2022 Jan 18;12(1). doi: 10.1093/tbm/ibab077.
Despite pervasive findings pointing to its inextricable role in intervention implementation, context remains poorly understood in implementation science. Existing approaches for describing context (e.g., surveys, interviews) may be narrow in scope or superficial in their elicitation of contextual data. Thus, in-depth and multilevel approaches are needed to meaningfully describe the contexts into which interventions will be implemented. Moreover, many studies assess context without subsequently using contextual information to enhance implementation. To be useful for improving implementation, though, methods are needed to apply contextual information during implementation. In the case example presented in this paper, we embedded an ethnographic assessment of context within a user-centered design approach to describe implementation context and apply that information to promote implementation. We developed a patient-reported outcome measure-based clinical intervention to assess and address the pervasive unmet needs of young adults with cancer: the Needs Assessment & Service Bridge (NA-SB). In this paper, we describe the user-centered design process that we used to anticipate context modifications needed to deliver NA-SB and implementation strategies needed to facilitate its implementation. Our ethnographic contextual inquiry yielded a rich understanding of local implementation context and contextual variation across potential scale-up contexts. Other methods from user-centered design (i.e., translation tables and a design team prototyping workshop) allowed us to translate that information into specifications for NA-SB delivery and a plan for implementation. Embedding ethnographic methods within a user-centered design approach can help us to tailor interventions and implementation strategies to their contexts of use to promote implementation.
尽管普遍存在的研究结果表明,它在干预实施中起着不可分割的作用,但实施科学中对背景的理解仍然很差。现有的描述背景的方法(例如,调查、访谈)可能范围狭窄,或者在引出背景数据方面过于肤浅。因此,需要深入和多层次的方法来有意义地描述干预措施将实施的背景。此外,许多研究评估背景,但随后不利用背景信息来增强实施。然而,为了改进实施,需要有方法在实施过程中应用背景信息。在本文提出的案例中,我们将对背景的人种学评估嵌入到以用户为中心的设计方法中,以描述实施背景,并应用该信息来促进实施。我们开发了一种基于患者报告的结果测量的临床干预措施,以评估和解决癌症青年患者普遍存在的未满足需求:需求评估和服务桥(NA-SB)。在本文中,我们描述了我们使用的以用户为中心的设计过程,以预测需要进行的背景修改,以及需要实施的策略,以促进其实施。我们的人种学背景调查产生了对当地实施背景和潜在扩展背景下的背景变化的深入理解。来自以用户为中心的设计的其他方法(即翻译表和设计团队原型制作研讨会)使我们能够将该信息转化为 NA-SB 交付的规范和实施计划。将人种学方法嵌入以用户为中心的设计方法中,可以帮助我们根据使用背景来调整干预措施和实施策略,以促进实施。