| Literature DB >> 29727779 |
Katie N Dainty1, Brian R Golden2, Rosemary Hannam2, Fiona Webster3, Gina Browne4, Nicole Mittmann5, Anita Stern6, Merrick Zwarenstein7.
Abstract
The increasing demand for home care is occurring in tandem with the need for governments to contain health care costs, maximize appropriate resource utilization and respond to patient preferences for where they receive care. We describe the evaluation of the Integrated Client Care Project (ICCP), a government funded project designed to improve value for outcomes for patients referred to community wound care services in Ontario, Canada. We applied a realist evaluation methodology in order to unpack the influences of contextual and mechanistic choices on the intended outcomes of the ICCP implementation. We collected data through ethnographic methods including 36 months of field observation, 46 key informant interviews and contemporaneous document analysis. The findings presented here highlight how theoretical mechanisms were negatively impacted by strong contextual patterns and weak implementation which led to underwhelming outcomes. Autonomy of the participant organizations, lack of power within the implementation team to drive change, opacity of the goals of the program, and disregard for the impact of complex historical relations within the home care sector compounded to undermine the intended outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; Home and community care; Implementation science; Organizational behaviour; Realist evaluation; Value-based healthcare
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29727779 DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.04.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Sci Med ISSN: 0277-9536 Impact factor: 4.634