| Literature DB >> 29208000 |
Kathleen P Conte1, Sisse Groen1, Victoria Loblay1, Amanda Green2, Andrew Milat3, Lina Persson3, Christine Innes-Hughes2, Jo Mitchell4, Sarah Thackway3, Mandy Williams5, Penelope Hawe6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of many interventions to promote health and prevent disease has been well established. The imperative has therefore shifted from amassing evidence about efficacy to scale-up to maximise population-level health gains. Electronic implementation monitoring, or 'e-monitoring', systems have been designed to assist and track the delivery of preventive policies and programs. However, there is little evidence on whether e-monitoring systems improve the dissemination, adoption, and ongoing delivery of evidence-based preventive programs. Also, given considerable difficulties with e-monitoring systems in the clinical sector, scholars have called for a more sophisticated re-examination of e-monitoring's role in enhancing implementation.Entities:
Keywords: Ethnography; Implementation science; Key performance indicators; Partnership research; Performance monitoring; Prevention; Scale-up
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29208000 PMCID: PMC5718021 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-017-0686-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Levels of PHIMS stakeholders and designers’ anticipated use of PHIMS data
Theories that will be used to analyse different domains within the research program
| Aspect of the research | Theory | Focus of the theory | Use and significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Describe the diversity of teams and practice contexts within which PHIMS is used (Objective 1) | Social network theory. Borgatti and Halgin [ | The social structure within which a practitioner is placed may influence the way they work. | The network size, the centrality of key players and the density of ties might correspond to different PHIMS-use styles and also to the intensity of work needed to achieve targets. |
| Describing and understanding how the data from PHIMs on KPI achievement came into being and is used at high levels in the state bureaucracy (Objectives 2, 3, 7) | Institutional theory. Scott et al. [ | Concerned with how the most deep and resilient aspects of social structures are created and maintained by schemas, rules, behaviours, routines. | Will be used to design interviews with high-level bureaucrats to characterise and understand the role of key actors, structures, resources and symbols in building legitimacy and authority for health promotion in an otherwise clinically dominated sector |
| Appreciate how PHIMS sits alongside other methods to structure, organise, record and manage health promotion practice at the local level (Objective 4) | Complex adaptive systems thinking. Axelrod and Cohen [ | Recognises that agents in a system (practitioners) are constantly adapting to changing conditions and inventing ways to respond. | Will sensitise researchers to observe how PHIMS may be grafted onto existing self-organised structures or vice versa (‘work-arounds’). The tendency for complex adaptive systems to (constantly) reorganise could potentially be harnessed for continuous practice improvement. |
| Understanding how PHIMS interacts with the process of practice and how roles, routines and activities are created and how data are used (Objective 5) | Activity setting theory. O’Donnell et al. [ | Examines the everyday settings where the dynamic interaction of people and physical objects produces regular scripts or behaviours. | Will sensitise researchers to observe the roles and symbols created by PHIMS and how practice time is impacted by PHIMS use. The theory suggests that PHIMS' embedding may be reflected in these key dimensions. |
| Practice theory. Feldman and Orlikowski [ | Recurrent actions that create the experience of organisational reality. Describes how members of a community are socialised into a workplace or profession. | To sensitise researchers to the ways that PHIMS sits within broader ‘taken-for-granted’ ways of working, and how health promotion as a practice takes shape and is constantly renegotiated. | |
| Normalisation process theory. May [ | How a new organisational practice, classification, technique or artefact becomes routine. Recognises implementation as a social process of collective action. | Will sensitise researchers to specific mechanisms such as the ‘talk’ that accompanies use of PHIMS and how this represents making sense of PHIMS, creating collective collaborative work and encouraging reflexive monitoring of practice. | |
| Articulate what matters most to health promotion practitioners—the values, attitudes and actions that most ‘define’ best practice (Objective 6) | Worldview theory. Geertz [ | A person or group's picture of how things are—self, society and the nature of things. | Will sensitise researchers to observe behaviours that demonstrate values (e.g. choice to go slowly on KPI achievement if there is an immediate gain that is valued more highly such as trust and relationship building with a school). |