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Implementing a shared decision-making and cognitive strategy-based intervention: Knowledge user perspectives and recommendations.

Kay-Ann M AllenKatherine R DittmannJennifer A HutterCatherine ChuangMichelle L DonaldAmie L EnnsNina HovanecAnne W HuntRichard S KellowanElizabeth A LinkewichAlexandra S PatelAnisha RehmtullaSara E McEwen
Published in: Journal of evaluation in clinical practice (2019)
The aim of this study was to employ knowledge user perspectives to develop recommendations that facilitate implementation of a complex, shared decision-making (SDM)-based intervention in an interprofessional setting. This study was part of a larger knowledge translation (KT) study in which interprofessional teams from five freestanding, academically affiliated, rehabilitation hospitals were tasked with implementing a cognitive strategy-based intervention approach that incorporates SDM known as Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance (CO-OP) to treat survivors of stroke. At the end of the 4-month CO-OP KT implementation support period, 10 clinicians, two from each site, volunteered as CO-OP site champions. A semi-structured focus group was conducted with 10 site champions 3 months following the implementation support period. To meet the study objective, an exploratory qualitative research design was used. The focus group session was audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed through the lens of the integrated promoting action on research implementation in health services (iPARIHS) framework. The focus group participants (n = 8) consisted of occupational therapists, physical therapists, and speech language pathologists. Ten recommendations for CO-OP implementation were extracted and co-constructed from the focus group transcript. The recommendations reflected all four iPARHIS constructs: Facilitation, Context, Innovation, and Recipients. Implementation recommendations, from the knowledge user perspective, highlight that context-specific facilitation is key to integrating a novel, complex intervention into interprofessional practice. Facilitators should lay out a framework for training, communication and implementation that is structured but still provides flexibility for iterative learning and active problem-solving within the relevant practice context.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • quality improvement
  • randomized controlled trial
  • patient safety
  • physical activity
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • clinical practice
  • magnetic resonance
  • working memory