| Literature DB >> 24006959 |
Amy Lloyd1, Natalie Joseph-Williams, Adrian Edwards, Andrew Rix, Glyn Elwyn.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Implementing shared decision making into routine practice is proving difficult, despite considerable interest from policy-makers, and is far more complex than merely making decision support interventions available to patients. Few have reported successful implementation beyond research studies. MAking Good Decisions In Collaboration (MAGIC) is a multi-faceted implementation program, commissioned by The Health Foundation (UK), to examine how best to put shared decision making into routine practice. In this paper, we investigate healthcare professionals' perspectives on implementing shared decision making during the MAGIC program, to examine the work required to implement shared decision making and to inform future efforts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24006959 PMCID: PMC3848565 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-8-102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Interventions and influences utilized during Phase 1 of MAGIC program
| Team feedback tool | A 22-item questionnaire designed to elicit team members’ views of their own and their team’s levels of competence in SDM. |
| Introductory workshop | A one-hour overview of SDM, including theories/definitions, rationale, evidence base, and methods for implementation. |
| SDM questionnaire | An eight-item Likert scale questionnaire designed to obtain patients’ perceptions of the degree of their involvement in decisions. |
| Extended training workshop | Two-hour training session on ‘how to do’ SDM, using simulated consultation scenarios. |
| Option Grids | Brief within-encounter patient decision support tools designed to help compare reasonable important options [ |
| Decision Quality Measures | A 15-item questionnaire (adapted from Sepucha and colleagues [ |
| Clinical leads meetings | Monthly meetings with implementation team and clinical team leader to check progress. |
| Learning events | Six monthly meetings where clinical leads from primary and secondary care teams in Newcastle and Cardiff met to address implementation challenges. |
| Feedback sessions | Six monthly seminars with each clinical team to present data. |
| ‘Ask 3 Questions’ campaign | Posters, leaflets and business cards designed to raise awareness of SDM and encourage both patients and doctors to work together in deciding on the best course of action (campaign adapted from the ‘Ask 3 Questions’ study in Australia [ |
| Executive Board level support | Eliciting demonstrable support from the Executive Board (or similar level in primary care) and middle-management for the MAGIC Program, |
Four generative mechanisms of Normalization Process Theory
| The | Differentiation | |
| Communal Specification | ||
| Individual Specification | ||
| Internalization | ||
| The | Initiation | |
| Enrolment | ||
| Legitimation | ||
| Activation | ||
| The | Interactional Workability | |
| Relational Integration | ||
| Skillset Workability | ||
| Contextual Integration | ||
| The | Systemization | |
| Communal Appraisal | ||
| Individual Appraisal | ||
| Reconfiguration |
Themes: the work of implementation
| Uncovering divergent views: the challenge of building coherence | Coherence |
| Facilitating participation, transferring ownership of the work | Cognitive participation |
| Assessing fit and adapting to change together | Collective action |
| Monitoring benefit, reflecting on value | Reflexive monitoring |