| Literature DB >> 29452582 |
Liz Glidewell1, Thomas A Willis2, Duncan Petty2, Rebecca Lawton3,4, Rosemary R C McEachan4, Emma Ingleson5, Peter Heudtlass5, Andrew Davies5, Tony Jamieson6, Cheryl Hunter2, Suzanne Hartley5, Kara Gray-Burrows7, Susan Clamp2, Paul Carder8, Sarah Alderson2, Amanda J Farrin5, Robbie Foy2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Interpreting evaluations of complex interventions can be difficult without sufficient description of key intervention content. We aimed to develop an implementation package for primary care which could be delivered using typically available resources and could be adapted to target determinants of behaviour for each of four quality indicators: diabetes control, blood pressure control, anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation and risky prescribing. We describe the development and prospective verification of behaviour change techniques (BCTs) embedded within the adaptable implementation packages.Entities:
Keywords: Audit and feedback; Behaviour change techniques; Clinical reminders; Computerised prompts; Discriminant content analysis; Educational outreach; Implementation intervention; Theoretical Domains Framework
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29452582 PMCID: PMC5816358 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-017-0704-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Multi-staged approach to develop and content analyse BCT content of implementation package. Multi-staged approach to develop and content analyse an implementation package with embedded BCTs adapted for four quality indicators
Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research (SRQR)
| Title and abstract | ||
|---|---|---|
| S1 | Title | Indicate qualitative approach ‘A prospective directed content analysis’ p1. |
| S2 | Abstract | Abstract includes background, purpose, methods, results and conclusions p2/3. |
| Introduction | ||
| S3 | Problem formulation | Significance of the problem studied p3, relevant theory p4, and empirical work p3/4. |
| S4 | Purpose or research question | Specific research objectives and research questions p4/5. |
| Methods | ||
| S5 | Qualitative approach and research paradigm | Multi-method qualitative approach (individual semi-structured interviews, observation, consensus panel work and a directed content analysis) informed by psychological theory p5, adopting an interpretivist stance p5. |
| S6 | Researcher characteristics and reflexivity | Researcher personal attributes, qualifications/experience p5& 7, and relationship with participants’ p7. |
| S7 | Context | Setting and salient contextual features p5. |
| S8 | Sampling strategy | How and why research participants’ p7 and p8 selected and rationale for no further sampling p8. |
| S9 | Ethical issues pertaining to human subjects | Review p7, consent p7 and data security issues N/A. |
| S10 | Data collection methods | Types of data collected p7/8, data collection procedures (start/stop dates, analysis plan and any modifications p7/8). |
| S11 | Data collection instruments and technologies | Instruments (guides/questionnaires N/A opportunistic conversations) and devices (audio recorders N/A field notes taken). |
| S12 | Units of study | Number and relevant characteristics of participants p7/8, documents N/A or events N/A. |
| S13 | Data processing | Methods prior to and during analysis (transcription N/A, data entry N/A, data management (see methods for different stages). |
| S14 | Data analysis | Process inferences, themes identified and developed (reported in separate paper), who involved p7/8. |
| S15 | Techniques to enhance trustworthiness | Rationale for member checking (not done), audit trail p7/8, triangulation N/A. |
| Results/Findings | ||
| S16 | Synthesis and interpretation | Main findings and integration with prior research or theory p10-end. |
| S17 | Links to empirical data | Evidence to substantiate analytic findings Tables |
| Discussion | ||
| S18 | Integration with prior work, implications, transferability and contribution(s) to the field | Main findings p8, how they challenge, support or elaborate on earlier scholarship p10-end. Scope of application/generalizability p10. Identification of unique contribution to scholarship p10-end. |
| S19 | Limitations | Trustworthiness and limitations p11 of findings. |
| Other | ||
| S20 | Conflicts of interest | Perceived influences and how managed p16. |
| S21 | Funding | Source of funding and role of funders in data collection, interpretation and reporting p16. |
Perceived determinants of adherence prioritised for intervention development
| Layered identification of theoretical determinants | Capability | Opportunity | Motivation | Other | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical | Psychological | Social | Physical | Reflective | Automatic | ||||||
| Skills | Knowledge | Memory | Behavioural regulation | Social influences | Environmental context | Beliefs about capabilities | Beliefs about consequences | Social professional role | Emotion | Patient factors | |
| 1. Interviewer consensus | AF | All | BP | DC | AF | BP | BP | All | AF | All | |
| 2. Emerging interview finding (most frequently cited determinant) | BP | All | AF | All | AF | DC | All | All | All | ||
| 3. Consensus panel of clinical and patient stakeholders | DC | DC | |||||||||
| 4. Extended qualitative analysis of interview data | AF | AF RP | AF | BP | All | All | All | All | |||
| Combined analysis | AF | All | AF | All | All | All | BP | All | All | AF | All |
AF Anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation, BP blood pressure, RP risky prescribing, DC diabetes control
Candidate behaviour change techniques mapped to determinants of behaviour ordered by core, prominent and less-evident determinants identified during previous interview study [35]
| Potential behaviour change technique (BCT) categories [ | Importance of determinant | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Core to all indicators | Prominent across indicators | Less evident | Not identified | ||||||||
| Environmental context | Social professional role | Knowledge | Memory | Social influences | Beliefs about consequences | Skills | Beliefs about capabilities | Motivation and goals | Emotion | Behavioural regulation | |
| Social support | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ||||||
| Antecedents | ● | ● | ● | ||||||||
| Comparison of behaviour | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ||||
| Feedback and monitoring | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | |||||
| Identity | ● | ● | |||||||||
| Covert learning | ● | ● | |||||||||
| Comparison of outcomes | ● | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Natural consequences | ● | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Shaping knowledge | ● | ● | |||||||||
| Goals and planning | ● | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Repetition and substitution | ● | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Associations | ● | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Regulation | ● | ● | ● | ||||||||
| Reward and threat | ● | ● | |||||||||
| Self-belief | ● | ||||||||||
| Scheduled consequences | ● | ● | |||||||||
| Number of potentially relevant BCT categories | 2 | 5 | 4 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 6 | 8 | 7 | 7 |
A dot signifies a BCT with the potential to target a determinant
Intervention description based on TIDIER [25]
| Audit and feedback | Educational outreach (supplemented by audit and feedback) | Computerised prompts and paper-based reminders | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rationale | We aimed to develop an adaptable implementation package which can be implemented within existing primary care systems and resources and adapted to specifically target barriers to change for four quality indicators. | ||
| Control interventions | Both control and intervention practices will be exposed to standard practice quality improvement initiatives e.g. national guidelines and financial incentives. | ||
| Materials and training |
| We commissioned for and recruited experienced Pharmacist facilitators who received 2 days training aimed to increase motivation, prompt individual and group reflection, increase confidence and intention to act. For each outreach visit, a practice-specific outreach pack was developed containing: the most recent (and all previous) audit report(s); a session outline; an action plan template that included space for noting current performance, setting a target, identifying who will do what and review date; and templates for assessing costs and benefits. We did not articulate the discrepancy or specifically request that the team did so and although it is possible that the team might do this, they might also explain the lack of achievement away in other ways and not those related to behaviours. As we can only infer that this technique was deployed we did not code for it. Training in BCT coding requires that inferences are not made. | For risky prescribing nine |
| Supportive activities | None. | Pharmacist training included a one-day face-to-face meeting with intervention developers focussing on goal setting, action planning, clinical barriers, and persuasive communication. This was followed by a half day of independent study using a folder of supporting documentation relevant to each clinical priority. The first outreach meeting of each facilitator was observed by an experienced facilitator and feedback was given. | None. |
| Intervention provider | Reports, searches and templates were created by the research team. | Professional outreach education company. | Reminders were created. |
| Mode of delivery | Reports were sent by post and e-mail. | Face-to-face sessions were offered to practices. | Practices were sent invitations to use computerised prompts from a task within their clinical information system. An email was also sent from the ASPIRE team to the practice manager and colleagues alerting them to option to accept the prompts into their CIS. |
| Schedule and intensity | Quarterly feedback reports. | Practices were offered an initial 30-min session. All practice staff involved in identifying/reviewing appropriate patients were invited to attend. A key clinical contact was identified to support practice engagement. Initial visits focussed on practice achievement data (from audit reports), identifying models of good practice, addressing barriers to change and creating an action plan to facilitate and review the change. Two days of pharmacist provision was offered to support patient identification and review. An additional follow-up visit was offered to review action plan progress and supportthe practice to create more challenging or attainable plans. | Practices were offered access to prompts at the beginning of the study and reminded of their availability via quarterly feedback reports. |
| Tailoring | Searches could be tailored by practices, allowing them to identify patients relevant to all or individual recommendations, or adjust target values to select specific groups of patients. | Session content could be modified to practice requirements. | Prompts could be copied and modified to practice requirements. |
| Modifications | None. | ||
| Fidelity of delivery, receipt and enactment | Will be assessed in the subsequent process evaluation. | ||
Behaviour change techniques excluded from intervention development or intended but not subsequently identified during content analyses
| Behaviour change techniques (BCTs) for changing determinants of behaviour [ | BCTs excluded because of delivery mechanism or contextual constraints (BCT taxonomy code reference [ | BCTs intended but not subsequently identified by independent coder | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Relevant determinants | |||
| Core determinants ‘environmental context’ and ‘social and professional role’. | Social support | Social support emotional (3.3) | |
| Antecedents | Avoidance/reducing exposure to cues for the behaviour (12.3) | ||
| Comparison of behaviour | Demonstration of the behaviour (6.1) | ||
| Feedback and monitoring | Monitoring of behaviour by others without feedback (2.1) | ||
| Identity | Incompatible beliefs (13.3) | Identification of self as role model (13.1) | |
| Covert learning | Imaginary punishment (16.1) | ||
| Prominent determinants ‘knowledge’, ‘memory’, ‘social influences’ and ‘beliefs about consequences’. | Comparison of outcomes | Comparative imagining of future outcomes (9.3) | |
| Natural consequences | Monitoring of emotional consequences (5.4) | Anticipated regret (5.5) | |
| Shaping knowledge | Behavioural experiments (4.4) | ||
| Goals and planning | Discrepancy between current behaviour and goal (1.6) | ||
| Repetition and substitution | Behavioural practice/rehearsal (8.1) | ||
| Associations | Cue signalling reward (7.2) | ||
| Regulation | Pharmacological support (11.1) | ||
| Reward and threat | Material incentive (behaviour) (10.1) | ||
| Less-evident determinants ‘self-belief’ and ‘scheduled consequences’ | Self-belief | Mental rehearsal of successful performance (15.2) | Verbal persuasion about capability (15.1) |
| Scheduled consequences | Behavioural cost (14.1) | ||