| Literature DB >> 19117509 |
Glyn Elwyn1, France Légaré, Trudy van der Weijden, Adrian Edwards, Carl May.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Decision support technologies (DSTs, also known as decision aids) help patients and professionals take part in collaborative decision-making processes. Trials have shown favorable impacts on patient knowledge, satisfaction, decisional conflict and confidence. However, they have not become routinely embedded in health care settings. Few studies have approached this issue using a theoretical framework. We explained problems of implementing DSTs using the Normalization Process Model, a conceptual model that focuses attention on how complex interventions become routinely embedded in practice.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19117509 PMCID: PMC2631595 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-3-57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Definitions of constructs and dimensions of the Normalization Process Model applied to Decision Support Technologies
Figure 1Normalisation Process Model applied to the implementation of a DST.
Endogenous factors that promote or inhibit the implementation of DSTs
| ▪ Enrolling patients in shared decision-making | ▪ Concept of shared decision-making | ▪ Ensuring efficient and safe interactions. | |
| ▪ Making DST available | ▪ New role as participant | ||
| ▪ Integrating DST in the consultation | ▪ Cognitive engagement with DST | ||
| ▪ Managing time to process patients | ▪ Understanding and assessing outcomes | ||
| ▪ Managing patients who do not enter into shared decision-making | ▪ Decisional responsibility | ||
| ▪ Linking DST to evidence base | ▪ Making sense of clinical knowledge | ▪ Assessing the value of evidence | |
| ▪ Confidence in applicability to individual patients. | ▪ Agenda setting over treatment outcomes | ▪ Understanding professional engagement | |
| ▪ Matching clinical evidence with patient knowledge | ▪ Defining and evaluating 'best practice' | ||
| ▪ Deciding on patients' accountability for engaging with DSTs | |||
| ▪ Dealing with safety and liability. | |||
Exogenous factors that promote or inhibit the implementation of DSTs
| ▪ Delegating to autonomous patients | ▪ Skills for participation | ▪ Specification of roles and competencies | |
| ▪ Communicating clinical decisions and risks | ▪ Accepting delegated clinical decisions | ▪ Definition of standard operating procedures and job descriptions. | |
| ▪ Identifying appropriate professional roles for DST delivery | ▪ Gaining competence | ▪ Defining decisions to meet organizational goals | |
| ▪ Delegating to other professionals | |||
| ▪ Identifying and evaluating competencies | |||
| ▪ Defining boundaries between determinate and indeterminate decision-making | |||
| ▪ Allocating physical media | ▪ Managing allocation decisions | ||
| ▪ Allocating time | ▪ Organizing protocols | ||
| ▪ Appraising value | ▪ Controlling budgets | ||
| ▪ Negotiating with managers | ▪ Managing professional autonomy | ||
| ▪ Managing medico-legal concerns. | ▪ Managing patient choice | ||