| Literature DB >> 26468076 |
Alison Kate Beck1, Amanda Baker2, Ben Britton3, Chris Wratten4, Judith Bauer5, Luke Wolfenden6, Gregory Carter7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The confidence with which researchers can comment on intervention efficacy relies on evaluation and consideration of intervention fidelity. Accordingly, there have been calls to increase the transparency with which fidelity methodology is reported. Despite this, consideration and/or reporting of fidelity methods remains poor. We seek to address this gap by describing the methodology for promoting and facilitating the evaluation of intervention fidelity in The EAT (Eating As Treatment) project: a multi-site stepped wedge randomised controlled trial of a dietitian delivered behaviour change counselling intervention to improve nutrition (primary outcome) in head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26468076 PMCID: PMC4607094 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-0978-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
NIH fidelity recommendations
| Fidelity component | Aim | Key considerations |
|---|---|---|
|
| To facilitate adequate hypothesis testing regarding underlying theory and clinical processes via: | • Intervention theory, goal and strategies including structure and delivery, role of interventionists, topics, activities, equipment and materials, mode of delivery |
| (1) Ensuring the intervention has sound theoretical underpinnings | • Treatment dose (for example, minimum and ideal frequency, duration and number of sessions) | |
| (2) Monitoring and minimising contamination within and between treatment arms | • Troubleshooting (for example, interventionist dropout) | |
| (3) Measuring treatment dose and intensity | ||
| (4) Identifying and addressing potential setbacks in intervention implementation | ||
|
| To ensure competent acquisition and maintenance of skills to equip providers to effectively deliver the intervention via | • Interventionist differences (for example, skill, education, experience and implementation style) |
| (1) Standardisation | • Threats (for example, intervention complexity and drift in delivery over time) | |
| (2) Steps to minimise skill ‘decay’ or ‘drift’ over time | ||
|
| To ensure that the intervention is delivered as intended via (1) Standardisation and monitoring | • Behaviours that are unique; essential, but not unique; compatible, but neither essential nor unique and prohibited |
| • Skill with which the intervention is delivered | ||
| • Non-specific treatment effects (for example, warmth, rapport) | ||
| • Assessment method (for example, reliability and validity of assessment measures; assessors; training) | ||
| • Threats (for example, mismatch between intervention and practitioner skill/education/self-efficacy; intervention complexity; contamination across treatment conditions) | ||
|
| To monitor and improve patient capacity to acquire knowledge and skills | • Comprehension of, engagement in and adherence to intervention content |
| • Dose received | ||
|
| To monitor and improve patient application of knowledge and skills in real life settings | • NA |
Study-specific fidelity checklist
| Yes | No | |
|---|---|---|
| Practitioner discusses how eating/nutrition is an integral part of | ||
| Practitioner encourages the patient to discuss their reason(s) for undergoing radiotherapy | ||
| Practitioner collaboratively develops a formal, written nutrition plan with the patient | ||
| Practitioner encourages the patient to discuss their progress towards the goals outlined on their written nutrition plan |