| Literature DB >> 30198304 |
Courtney R Lyles1, Margaret A Handley1, Sara L Ackerman1, Dean Schillinger1, Pamela Williams1, Marisa Westbrook2, Gato Gourley1, Urmimala Sarkar1.
Abstract
Little is known about dissemination and implementation in safety net settings. The authors conducted a literature review of innovation/implementation studies in US safety net health care settings between 2008 and 2017. Each article was coded for (1) intervention characteristics, (2) implementation stage, (3) internal versus external ownership, and (4) prespecified implementation outcomes (eg, acceptability and fidelity). Twenty studies were identified; the majority were implemented within community clinics or integrated safety net systems (15 articles), most involved care process improvements (13 articles), and most were internally developed (13 articles). The internally developed innovations reported fewer barriers to acceptability among staff/providers, higher leadership involvement and organizational alignment, greater amounts of customization to the local setting, and better sustainment. Future work should harness the high levels of alignment and acceptability in implementation research within safety net settings, with an eye toward maintaining fidelity to facilitate dissemination across sites.Entities:
Keywords: care process innovations; implementation science; safety net; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30198304 PMCID: PMC7243669 DOI: 10.1177/1062860618798469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Qual ISSN: 1062-8606 Impact factor: 1.852