Department of Social Work, Education and Community Wellbeing, Northumbria University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE7 7XA, UK; Population and Health Science Institute, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE2 4AX, UK.
Faculty of Psychology, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, 53-238, Wroclaw, Poland; NHMRC CRE in Digital Technology to Transform Chronic Disease Outcomes, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, 333 Exhibition Street, 3000, Melbourne, Australia.
Soc Sci Med. 2022 Apr;298:114840. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114840. Epub 2022 Feb 23.
Translating research evidence into clinical practice to improve care involves healthcare professionals adopting new behaviours and changing or stopping their existing behaviours. However, changing healthcare professional behaviour can be difficult, particularly when it involves changing repetitive, ingrained ways of providing care. There is an increasing focus on understanding healthcare professional behaviour in terms of non-reflective processes, such as habits and routines, in addition to the more often studied deliberative processes. Theories of habit and routine provide two complementary lenses for understanding healthcare professional behaviour, although to date, each perspective has only been applied in isolation.
To combine theories of habit and routine to generate a broader understanding of healthcare professional behaviour and how it might be changed.
Sixteen experts met for a two-day multidisciplinary workshop on how to advance implementation science by developing greater understanding of non-reflective processes.
From a psychological perspective 'habit' is understood as a process that maintains ingrained behaviour through a learned link between contextual cues and behaviours that have become associated with those cues. Theories of habit are useful for understanding the individual's role in developing and maintaining specific ways of working. Theories of routine add to this perspective by describing how clinical practices are formed, adapted, reinforced and discontinued in and through interactions with colleagues, systems and organisational procedures. We suggest a selection of theory-based strategies to advance understanding of healthcare professionals' habits and routines and how to change them.
Combining theories of habit and routines has the potential to advance implementation science by providing a fuller understanding of the range of factors, operating at multiple levels of analysis, which can impact on the behaviours of healthcare professionals, and so quality of care provision.
将研究证据转化为临床实践以改善护理服务,这涉及到医疗保健专业人员采用新的行为,并改变或停止其现有的行为。然而,改变医疗保健专业人员的行为可能具有挑战性,尤其是当涉及改变重复的、根深蒂固的护理方式时。除了更常研究的深思熟虑的过程之外,人们越来越关注理解医疗保健专业人员的非反思性过程(例如习惯和常规)行为。习惯和常规理论为理解医疗保健专业人员的行为提供了两种互补的视角,尽管迄今为止,每种观点都只是单独应用。
结合习惯和常规理论,更全面地了解医疗保健专业人员的行为及其可能发生的变化。
16 名专家参加了为期两天的多学科研讨会,探讨如何通过加深对非反思性过程的理解来推进实施科学。
从心理学角度来看,“习惯”被理解为一种通过将环境线索与已经与之相关的行为之间建立习得联系,来维持根深蒂固行为的过程。习惯理论对于理解个人在发展和维持特定工作方式方面的作用很有用。常规理论在此基础上增加了对临床实践是如何在与同事、系统和组织程序的相互作用中形成、适应、强化和停止的描述。我们提出了一系列基于理论的策略,以增进对医疗保健专业人员的习惯和常规的理解,并探讨如何改变这些习惯和常规。
结合习惯和常规理论有潜力通过提供对影响医疗保健专业人员行为的范围广泛的因素的更全面理解,从而推进实施科学,并提高护理服务的质量。