| Literature DB >> 27422011 |
Cathleen Colón-Emeric1,2, Mark Toles3, Michael P Cary4, Melissa Batchelor-Murphy4, Tracey Yap4, Yuting Song4, Rasheeda Hall5,6, Amber Anderson4, Andrew Burd4, Ruth A Anderson3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the sustainability of behavioral change interventions in long-term care (LTC). Following a cluster randomized trial of an intervention to improve staff communication (CONNECT), we conducted focus groups of direct care staff and managers to elicit their perceptions of factors that enhance or reduce sustainability in the LTC setting. The overall aim was to generate hypotheses about how to sustain complex interventions in LTC.Entities:
Keywords: Behavior change; Long-term care; Nursing education research; Qualitative research; Quality improvement; Sustainability; System intervention
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27422011 PMCID: PMC4947307 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-016-0454-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Focus group questions, with analysis domains and intended charting category
| Question | Codes | Domain |
|---|---|---|
| Grand tour question | ||
| What was most important to you in the CONNECT program? What struck you about CONNECT? | ||
| Probes | ||
| How did the CONNECT program change the way you communicate about resident care? | • Change in communication | Salience of intervention components |
| Which parts of CONNECT, if any, had the biggest impact on the way you communicate about resident care? How? Examples. | • High impact | |
| Which parts of CONNECT, if any, were less helpful? Why? Examples. | • Low impact | |
| What would you change about how CONNECT was presented or delivered (for example, classroom sessions vs. self-study materials, vs. one-on-one discussions with CONNECT champions)? | • Suggested change | |
| Overall, what (if any) parts of the CONNECT program will you continue to do in your facility now that we have finished the program? | • Plan to continue | Sustainability |
| What can your facility do to continue using the CONNECT program? How will they refresh, update, and orient staff to CONNECT? | • Facility tailoring | |
| Now that we have talked about what pieces of CONNECT you want to keep and how you want to share them, what kinds of materials or tools do you need to share that information effectively? | • Tools needed | |
Characteristics of study facilities and focus group participants
| Nursing home |
| |
| Bed size (mean) | 130 | |
| For profit (%) | 100 | |
| Urban location (%) | 50 | |
| Study participants | Managers | Direct care staff |
| Age (%) | ||
| 18–35 years | 22 | 39 |
| 36–55 years | 62 | 51 |
| 56 years and older | 16 | 10 |
| Female (%) | 84 | 93 |
| Race (%) | ||
| Caucasian | 72 | 25 |
| Black | 25 | 63 |
| Others | 3 | 12 |
| College or Associate degree (%) | 91 | 32 |
| Role (%) | ||
| Administrator | 5 | 0 |
| Department manager | 59 | 0 |
| Social work | 12 | 0 |
| Nurse aide | 0 | 43 |
| Direct care nurse | 0 | 25 |
| Dietary | 12 | 0 |
| Housekeeping | 0 | 16 |
| Rehabilitation | 12 | 2 |
| Others | 0 | 14 |
Key LTC staff insights about sustainability and potential approaches suggested by focus group participants, CONNECT study experience, or implementation science literature
| Key participant insights | Potential approaches |
|---|---|
| Intervention features | |
| Content | |
| • Must be perceived to be beneficial and promote organizational aims | • Include regular outcome measurement with participant feedback |
| Delivery | |
| • Group sessions allow mutual instruction, increase confidence, give “permission” to bring up problems, and strengthen relationships | • Consider combination of group and individual sessions for interventions requiring staff coordination |
| Customizability/flexibility | |
| • Sessions should accommodate clinical demands, include all shifts, and be customized to fit each facility’s schedule | • Build flexibility into intervention testing, e.g., allow staff to choose when/where instruction occurs, number of sessions (multiple short vs. single long), number of participants per session |
| Materials | |
| • Intervention materials should consider diversity of staff; make learning objectives pertinent regardless of role, experience, education level, language | • Use range of authentic case scenarios of interdisciplinary interest when possible |
| Contextual features | |
| Leadership | |
| • Direct care staff want to observe active leadership support and engagement in the program | • Avoid always separating managers and staff for training |
| Incentives | |
| • “Accountability” to change behavior is expected by staff | • Avoid mandatory training sessions |
| External supports | |
| Processes and procedures | |
| • Formalizing changes through changing work routines promotes continuation | • Make explicit changes to meeting schedules, documentation templates, work rounds, etc. |
| Tools | |
| • Visual aids and reminders scattered throughout work environment are helpful | • Develop posters, bulletin boards, bookmarks, calendars, pens, etc. |