| Literature DB >> 26443999 |
Whitney Berta1, Lisa Cranley2, James W Dearing3, Elizabeth J Dogherty4, Janet E Squires5, Carole A Estabrooks6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Facilitation is a guided interactional process that has been popularized in health care. Its popularity arises from its potential to support uptake and application of scientific knowledge that stands to improve clinical and managerial decision-making, practice, and ultimately patient outcomes and organizational performance. While this popular concept has garnered attention in health services research, we know that both the content of facilitation and its impact on knowledge implementation vary. The basis of this variation is poorly understood, and understanding is hampered by a lack of conceptual clarity. DISCUSSION: In this paper, we argue that our understanding of facilitation and its effects is limited in part by a lack of clear theoretical grounding. We propose a theoretical home for facilitation in organizational learning theory. Referring to extant literature on facilitation and drawing on theoretical literature, we discuss the features of facilitation that suggest its role in contributing to learning capacity. We describe how facilitation may contribute to generating knowledge about the application of new scientific knowledge in health-care organizations. Facilitation's promise, we suggest, lies in its potential to stimulate higher-order learning in organizations through experimenting with, generating learning about, and sustaining small-scale adaptations to organizational processes and work routines. The varied effectiveness of facilitation observed in the literature is associated with the presence or absence of factors known to influence organizational learning, since facilitation itself appears to act as a learning mechanism. We offer propositions regarding the relationships between facilitation processes and key organizational learning concepts that have the potential to guide future work to further our understanding of the role that facilitation plays in learning and knowledge generation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26443999 PMCID: PMC4596304 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0323-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Single-loop and double-loop learning under conditions of high environmental uncertainty. A Actions are linked by arrows to comprise a process. O outcome(s) of a process
Fig. 2Relating concepts of knowledge implementation and external and internal absorptive capacity
Map of facilitation processes and activities to external absorptive capacity meta-routines
| External absorptive capacity meta-routines [ | Facilitation processes and activitiesa [ |
|---|---|
| Identifying and recognizing the value of externally generated knowledge | Introduces new research-based ideas of potential value to resolving performance gaps |
| Learning from and with partners, suppliers, customers, competitors, and consultants | Establishes effective communication channels |
| Networking | |
| Supports the development of new competencies or skills by identifying external suppliers | |
| Transferring knowledge back to the organization (establishing knowledge sharing processes) | Establishes effective communication channels |
aFor primary sources, see Additional file 1: Table S1a
Map of facilitation processes and activities to internal absorptive capacity meta-routines
| Internal absorptive capacity meta-routines [ | Facilitation processes and activitiesa [ |
|---|---|
| Facilitating variation | Encourages critical assessment of current practice that leads to identification of performance gap(s) |
| Introduces new ideas (i.e., research and associated knowledge that may address performance gaps) | |
| Enhances staff receptivity to change | |
| Identifies resources needed to support change | |
| Motivates and encourages others to make a change | |
| Supports the development of new competencies/skills among staff | |
| Managing internal selection regimes | Assists in establishing common goals |
| Enables implementation of evidence into practice | |
| Enables research use | |
| Attends to the process of achieving goals | |
| Provides feedback about research use | |
| Sharing knowledge and superior practices across the organization | Establishes effective (internal) communication channels |
| Promotes a culture for change | |
| Creates a supportive (local) climate | |
| Creates a vision that embraces evidence-based practice | |
| Reflecting, updating, and replicating (retention) | Tailors facilitation activities to local needs and circumstances |
| Provides ongoing support and resources to achieve goals | |
| Facilitates trialable initiatives | |
| Maintains change momentum | |
| Supports the development of new competencies/skills among staff | |
| Supports a goal-oriented dynamic process that promotes learning through critical reflection | |
| Managing adaptive tension (continuous progression) | Creates a vision that embraces evidence-based practice |
| Promotes a culture for change | |
| Creates a supportive (local) climate | |
| Empowers staff |
aFor primary sources, see Additional file 1: Table S2a