Identifying Implementation Strategies That Address Barriers and Facilitate Implementation of Digital Interventions in HIV Primary Care Settings: Results from the Pilot Implementation of Positive Health Check.
Brittany A ZulkiewiczOlivia BurrusCamilla HarshbargerAlexa OrtizBryan R GarnerMegan A LewisPublished in: AIDS and behavior (2021)
We used the 1-month pilot implementation of Positive Health Check, a brief web-based video counseling intervention that supports patients with HIV attending HIV primary care clinics, to exemplify how studying implementation strategies earlier in the evidence-generation process can improve implementation outcomes in later pragmatic trials. We identified how implementation strategies were operationalized and the barriers and facilitators these strategies addressed using multiple data sources, including adapted implementation procedures and weekly structured interviews conducted with 9 key stakeholders in 4 HIV primary care clinics. Nineteen of 73 discrete implementation strategies for clinical innovations were used in the pilot implementation of Positive Health Check. Clinic staff reported 17 barriers and facilitators related to the clinic environment, patient population, intervention characteristics, and training and technical assistance. Identifying the link between strategies, barriers, and facilitators helped plan for a subsequent larger multisite pragmatic trial.
Keyphrases
- primary care
- healthcare
- antiretroviral therapy
- quality improvement
- hiv infected
- general practice
- study protocol
- randomized controlled trial
- hiv positive
- public health
- hiv testing
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv aids
- type diabetes
- mental health
- machine learning
- clinical trial
- physical activity
- weight loss
- metabolic syndrome
- risk assessment
- smoking cessation
- phase ii
- human health
- case report
- artificial intelligence