| Literature DB >> 22531013 |
Simon D French1, Sally E Green, Denise A O'Connor, Joanne E McKenzie, Jill J Francis, Susan Michie, Rachelle Buchbinder, Peter Schattner, Neil Spike, Jeremy M Grimshaw.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is little systematic operational guidance about how best to develop complex interventions to reduce the gap between practice and evidence. This article is one in a Series of articles documenting the development and use of the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) to advance the science of implementation research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22531013 PMCID: PMC3443064 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-38
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Steps for developing a theory-informed implementation intervention
| STEP 1: Who needs to do what, differently? | · Identify the evidence-practice gap |
| STEP 2: Using a theoretical framework, which barriers and enablers need to be addressed? | · From the literature, and experience of the development team, select which theory(ies), or theoretical framework(s), are likely to inform the pathways of change |
| STEP 3: Which intervention components (behaviour change techniques and mode(s) of delivery) could overcome the modifiable barriers and enhance the enablers? | · Use the chosen theory, or framework, to identify potential behaviour change techniques to overcome the barriers and enhance the enablers |
| STEP 4: How can behaviour change be measured and understood? | · Identify mediators of change to investigate the proposed pathways of change |
Description of the steps used to choose the behaviour change techniques for the IMPLEMENT intervention
| Low awareness of the meanings and actions associated with the guideline’s key messages; low awareness of LBP red flags and skills in how to identify them | Knowledge (GP) | |
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| GPs’ perceptions of patients’ expectations and of patients’ beliefs about consequences | Knowledge (patient) | |
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| Attitudes towards managing patients without x-ray, based on perceived consequences of the behaviour, e.g. fear of missing underlying pathology and belief that patient will feel reassured with an x-ray | 1. Beliefs about consequences | |
| Beliefs about negative consequences and beliefs about positive consequences of practising in a manner consistent with the guideline’s key messages | Beliefs about consequences | |
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| Skills and beliefs about capabilities related to guideline key messages | 1. Skills | |
| Perceived need to give the patient something to replace x-ray | Skills | |
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| Limited time to explain why patient does not need an x-ray and explain advice to stay active | Environmental context | |
| Beliefs about the role of the GP when managing acute low back pain | Professional role and identity | |
| Skills and beliefs about capabilities related to negotiating with/reassuring patients that plain x-ray is unnecessary | 1. Skills | |
| GPs forget to give advice to stay active in standard consultation | Memory | |
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| GPs’ perception that other people/organisations expectx-rays e.g., third party payors, radiologists | Social influences | |
* Technique: which behaviour change technique was chosen. Mode: how the technique was delivered. Content: what was delivered.
Mediators and outcomes measured in the IMPLEMENT trial
| Mediating mechanisms of behaviour change | · Constructs theorised to be mediators of behaviour change (measured by practitioner survey) |
| Practitioner outcomes | · X-ray referral rates (measured by patient file audit) |
| Patient health outcomes | · Low back pain outcome measures (pain and disability measured via patient interview) |