| Literature DB >> 28882908 |
Martha Therese Gjestsen1, Siri Wiig2, Ingelin Testad1,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To identify contextual factors at different organisational levels to guide the implementation of an assistive living technology intervention in Norwegian primary home care.Entities:
Keywords: health informatics; health services research; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28882908 PMCID: PMC5595176 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-015455
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1The MUSIQ framework is a comprehensive conceptual framework for approaching and studying an implementation process in healthcare. QI, quality improvement. Copyright © BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and the Health Foundation. All rights reserved. Reuse licence number 3785340881529.
Data material
| System level | Data | |
| Macro level | Documents: 6 | ONR 2011:11 |
| Meso level | Interviews: 5 | Assistant director, project manager, adviser in municipal administration, head of health and welfare department, head of home-based care |
| Documents: 2 | Municipal strategy plan for implementing assistive living technologies, report on use of resources in municipal healthcare services | |
| Micro level | Focus group interviews: 2 (n= | Six informants in each group; nurses in direct patient care and nurse managers |
Data analysis process
| Data source | Findings | Factors in MUSIQ | ||
| Macro level | Care plan 2020 | ‘Main aim in the National programme for development and implementation of assistive living technologies is that assistive living technologies are integrated in primary care services. | Governmental expectations related to implementation of assistive living technologies, as an integrated part of municipal services | External motivator |
| Meso level | Head of health and social welfare department | ‘I don’t quite know how, and this is probably the big challenge; how will the municipality build a system concerning this?’ | Organisation is still immature | Maturity |
| Micro level | Nurse, focus group 2 | ‘I think that Skype could be a tool between accident and emergencies department, general practitioners and home-based care. One thing is to describe it over the phone, it’s completely different to show how the situation really is; we could provide blood pressure, pulse, O2 saturation and such…’ | Healthcare professionals motivated to use assistive living technologies in daily care | Motivation to change |
Figure 2Results organised on different levels: the main contextual factors identified in this study were external motivators and project sponsorship (macro level); leadership, workforce focus and maturity (meso level); and motivation to change and maturity (micro level). The results are depicted in figure 2. MUSIQ, model for understanding success in quality; QI= quality improvement.