| Literature DB >> 22380718 |
Robin Urquhart1, Geoffrey A Porter, Eva Grunfeld, Joan Sargeant.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The dominant method of reporting findings from diagnostic and surgical procedures is the narrative report. In cancer care, this report inconsistently provides the information required to understand the cancer and make informed patient care decisions. Another method of reporting, the synoptic report, captures specific data items in a structured manner and contains only items critical for patient care. Research demonstrates that synoptic reports vastly improve the quality of reporting. However, synoptic reporting represents a complex innovation in cancer care, with implementation and use requiring fundamental shifts in physician behaviour and practice, and support from the organization and larger system. The objective of this study is to examine the key interpersonal, organizational, and system-level factors that influence the implementation and use of synoptic reporting in cancer care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22380718 PMCID: PMC3307439 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Description of the three theoretical perspectives guiding the case study
| Construct/Factor | Description |
|---|---|
| Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (PARiHS) | |
| Evidence | '[K]nowledge derived from a variety of sources that has been subjected to testing and has found to be credible' [ |
| Context | The 'environment or setting in which people receive healthcare services, or... the environment or setting in which the proposed change is to be implemented' [ |
| • Culture manifests itself through the values, beliefs, and assumptions embedded in organizations and is reflected in 'the way things are done around here' [ | |
| • Leadership 'summarizes the nature of human relationships such that effective leadership gives rise to clear roles, effective teamwork, and effective organizational structures' [ | |
| • Evaluation includes performance monitoring and feedback at the individual, team, and system levels. | |
| Facilitation | A 'technique by which one person makes things easier for others' [ |
| Organizational framework of innovation implementation | |
| Management support | Managers' commitment to the implementation process, including investments in quality implementation policies and practices. |
| Financial resource availability | The actual or potential resources that allow an organization or team adapt to, implement, and sustain change. |
| Implementation policies and practices | '[T]he formal strategies (i.e., the policies) the organization uses to put the innovation into use and the actions that follow from those strategies (i.e., the practices)' [ |
| Implementation climate | 'Employees' shared perceptions of the importance of innovation implementation within the organization' [ |
| Innovation-values fit | '[T]he perceived fit between the innovation and professional or organizational values, competencies and mission' [ |
| Champions | 'Charismatic individuals with significant personal authority who identify with the innovation and throw their weight behind its adoption and implementation' [ |
| The need for systems change* | |
| Nature of knowledge | 'The way in which participants (individuals) in the system understand the nature and characteristics of the new piece of knowledge and accept it' [ |
| Local autonomy | The extent to which individuals, team, and the unit involved 'can make informed, autonomous decisions about how they can use the new knowledge to improve outcomes' [ |
| (Re)Negotiation | How individuals 'negotiate and renegotiate relations with others (individuals, teams, internal, external relations) in their system' [ |
| Resources | How individuals 'attract necessary resources to sustain the changes/improvements in practice' [ |
*In this recent theoretical paper, Kitson [49] critiqued the critical social science, action science, diffusion of innovations, practice development, management of innovations, and learning organizations and systems theories literature to explore the underlying assumptions and theories used to describe healthcare systems and how knowledge is translated into practice.
Proposed key informants
| CASE* | DESCRIPTION OF INFORMANTS† |
|---|---|
| NSBSP | • 4-5 radiologists |
| • 3-4 implementation personnel (leaders, team members)‡ | |
| • 3 organizational members ( | |
| • 2 executive- or funding-level decision-makers | |
| • 2 report end-users ( | |
| CCPP | • 4-5 gastroenterologists/general surgeons |
| • 3-4 implementation personnel (leaders, team members)‡ | |
| • 3 organizational members ( | |
| • 2 executive- or funding-level decision-makers | |
| • 2 report end-users ( | |
| SSRTP | • 4-5 surgeons |
| • 3-4 implementation personnel (leaders, team members)‡ | |
| • 3 organizational members ( | |
| • 2 executive- or funding-level decision-makers | |
| • 2 report end-users ( | |
*NSBSP = Nova Scotia Breast Screening Program; CCPP = Colon Cancer Prevention Program; SSRTP = Surgical Synoptic Reporting Tools Project.
The specified number represents the minimal number of key informants per category.
‡Implementation personnel may be interviewed on several occasions (e.g., initial and follow-up interviews) depending on the case and data collected.