| Literature DB >> 29088308 |
Robert Shannon1, Maggie Donovan-Hall1, Anne Bruton1,2,3.
Abstract
Motivational interviewing (MI) is a method for building motivation for behaviour change that has potential for use in respiratory contexts. There is a paucity of published research exploring the feasibility of this intervention from the clinicians' perspective. This study aimed to explore respiratory clinicians' views of MI: Is it perceived as useful? Could it be integrated into practice? What training would be required to make it part of routine care? Nine respiratory clinicians attended a one-day MI workshop and a semi-structured face-to-face interview two weeks later. All interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed with thematic analysis. Four main themes are presented-1) MI's suitability for use in respiratory contexts: participants saw potential in using MI to motivate their patients to engage with prescribed respiratory interventions, such as increased physical activity. Those who experimented with new skills post-workshop were encouraged by patient responsiveness and outcomes. 2) MI's relationship with routine clinical practice: some believed they already used elements of MI, but most participants felt MI was fundamentally 'different' to their normal style of working. 3) Implementation issues: additional time would need to be made available to enable an appropriate depth of conversation. 4) Training issues: Participants sensed the complexity of MI could make it difficult to learn and that it would take them time to become competent. On-going supervision was perceived as necessary. One key challenge identified was how to suppress behaviours that are antithetical to MI. These findings lend support to the feasibility of using MI in respiratory contexts such as pulmonary rehabilitation programmes, but highlight implementation and training issues that would need to be overcome. The insights have informed the development of another study, testing the effect of a tailored training package on MI skill, specifically for respiratory clinicians delivering pulmonary rehabilitation programmes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29088308 PMCID: PMC5663487 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187335
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Phases of thematic analysis adapted from Braun and Clarke (2006) [24].
| Phase | Description of Process |
|---|---|
| 1. Data familiarisation | Audio-recordings of interviews were transcribed verbatim (RS). Transcripts were read and re-read (RS). Initial ideas were noted (RS) |
| 2. Generating initial codes | Systematic coding of entire data set on a line-by-line basis was performed (codes were assigned to chunks of data—words, sentences or paragraphs) (RS). Extracts of data relevant to each code were collated (RS). Written reflection on interesting features was produced (RS). |
| 3. Searching for themes | Excerpts from each code were re-read (RS). Codes were collated into potential themes (RS). |
| 4. Reviewing themes | Research team members checked whether the themes worked in relation to the coded extracts (RS, MD-H). All transcripts were re-read to establish whether themes worked in relation to the data set (RS). |
| 5. Defining and describing themes | On-going analysis was performed to refine the specifics of each theme and the overall narrative of the analysis (RS, MD-H). Research team members checked that each theme captured something important in relation to the overall research question. |
| 6. Producing the report | Appropriate examples of extracts that best represent each theme/subtheme were selected (RS, MD-H, AB). The analysis was linked to the research questions and literature (RS, MD-H, AB). A final written report was produced (RS, MD-H, AB). |