| Literature DB >> 29884236 |
Harriet Koorts1, Elizabeth Eakin2, Paul Estabrooks3, Anna Timperio4, Jo Salmon4, Adrian Bauman5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Few efficacious physical activity interventions are successfully translated and sustained in practice. We propose a practical guide for researchers to increase the likelihood of successful implementation and scale up of physical activity interventions in practice contexts. The guide is based on two principles: (i) differences between the research and practice context can be addressed during intervention development and implementation planning by focusing on system, delivery personnel, and intervention characteristics; and (ii) early planning for implementation barriers and facilitators can improve subsequent translation into practice.Entities:
Keywords: Dissemination; Health behaviour; Implementation; Physical activity; Public health; Translation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29884236 PMCID: PMC5994105 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-018-0678-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Fig. 1PRACTIS guide steps
Checklist considerations when characterizing implementation setting parameters (Step 1)
| Level | Characteristics | Process of intervention adoption and delivery | Sustainability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention population (Individual level) | 1. Who will access the intervention? What is the size of the target population? Are there participation eligibility criteria (i.e. age)? Are there subgroups that experience disparities in physical activity? | 2. How will the target population access/be recruited into the intervention? What will motivate or incentivize them to take part? How will you ensure equity of access for disadvantaged subgroups? | 3. How will retention be supported and monitored? How will you ensure those who may be at higher risk of attrition will be retained and how will this be monitored? |
| Implementers (Provider level) | 4. Who will deliver the intervention? How many implementers will be required? Are there eligibility criteria to deliver the intervention (i.e. level of skill, knowledge, education)? | 5. How will implementers be identified/engaged and trained? What will motivate or incentivize them to implement the intervention? How will you facilitate engagement with disadvantaged groups? | 6. How will implementers be supported (i.e. ongoing training, performance feedback, champions) to sustain intervention fidelity and delivery? How will you prepare for sustainability in lower-resourced settings? |
| Delivery setting/org. (Organizational level) | 7. What is the target delivery setting(s) (i.e. setting, size) and are there eligibility criteria for adoption (i.e. possess certain resources)? How will you engage settings that provide services to disadvantaged subgroups? | 8. How will target delivery settings be identified and be made aware of the intervention? What will motivate or incentivize the setting to adopt and implement the intervention? | 9. Who will take ownership of the intervention and how will adoption, delivery, impact, and sustainability be monitored? How will start-up and ongoing costs be considered when planning for sustainability and implementation at scale? |
| Environment/ context (Community/ systems level) | 10. What are the key characteristics of the target community (i.e. built environment infrastructure, low-high income)? How will you engage communities with disadvantaged subgroups? | 11. How will characteristics of the community (i.e. funding and political climate, readiness for implementation) influence dissemination, implementation and scale-up? How will community accountability for implementation be generated and assessed? | 12. Who at the community/systems level will be responsible for the intervention? Are there individual or organizational champions for intervention implementation that could help to plan for sustainability? |
| Intervention factors: (All levels) | 13. What is the intervention design (i.e. strategies, underlying principles, delivery format, duration, resources required)? What are the core and adaptable elements (i.e. flexibility)? Which elements may/may not be scalable? How simple/complex is the design and what relative advantage does the intervention provide? | 14. How will the intervention and plans for implementation, be developed so they align with organizational missions, values and infrastructure (i.e. size, resource availability)? How will the intervention integrate into existing individual and organizational practices (i.e. setting compatibility)? | 15. How will the intervention and associated costs and resources for delivery (i.e. materials) be sustainably funded? How will intervention implementation processes (i.e. setting/staff training) be integrated into organizational policies and job descriptions? How will implementation capacity be developed and sustained at scale? |
Descriptive criteria of the Five P’s for effective implementation and scale up (Step 1)
| The Five P’s | Descriptive criteria |
|---|---|
| 1. People | The type and number of people that the intervention will reach, and the individuals that will be involved/required for implementation and scale-up |
| 2. Place | The settings/organizations that will be involved/required for implementation and scale-up |
| 3. Process | The intervention or implementation process that will occur in practice |
| 4. Provisions | The resources (e.g. human, physical and fiscal) that will be necessary to achieve intervention implementation and scale-up |
| 5. Principles | The underlying principles of the intervention (e.g. individual behavior change) and implementation process (e.g. building capacity for implementation) that will be scaled-up in practice |
Fig. 2Decision tree to identify key stakeholders at multiple levels (Step 2)
Fig. 3Ecological model of potential influences on intervention implementation in practice (Step 3)
Example strategies to address multi-level contextual barriers to implementation (Step 4)
| Level of identified barrier | Example strategies to address and/or assess contextual implementation barriers | |
|---|---|---|
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| Intervention population (Individual level) | • Focus groups with target population to explore barriers and facilitators to intervention design at scale and fostering sustained participation. | • Measure characteristics of responders and non-responders, and compare with general population to assess representativeness and generalizability. |
| Implementers (Provider level) | • Focus groups with target implementers to explore existing implementation infrastructure and feasibility of intended intervention delivery. | • Measure level of intervention delivery (i.e. dose delivered, dose received, and fidelity/adaptation) and assess associations with implementer characteristics. |
| Delivery setting/org. (Organizational level) | • Consultation/participatory research approaches with stakeholders (delivery settings who will support/provide the training/host implementers) on existing dissemination strategies and implementation infrastructure, to identify barriers to sustained implementation. | • Measure characteristics of delivery setting (i.e. size) and explore association with adoption decision, intervention delivery (i.e. dose) and intervention outcomes. |
| Community factors (Community/systems level) | • Consultation with organizations who will host/fund the intervention. Explore funding infrastructures, conflicting/supporting policies and local delivery context. | • Measure perceived contextual barriers to intervention adoption, delivery and sustainability. |