| Literature DB >> 32033575 |
Nathaniel J Williams1,2,3, Courtney Benjamin Wolk4, Emily M Becker-Haimes4,5, Rinad S Beidas4,6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Implementation theory suggests that first-level leaders, sometimes referred to as middle managers, can increase clinicians' use of evidence-based practice (EBP) in healthcare settings by enacting specific leadership behaviors (i.e., proactive, knowledgeable, supportive, perseverant with regard to implementation) that develop an EBP implementation climate within the organization; however, longitudinal and quasi-experimental studies are needed to test this hypothesis.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral health; Evidence-based practice; Implementation climate; Implementation leadership; Mechanism; Mediation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32033575 PMCID: PMC7006179 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-020-0970-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Study theoretical model. Hypothesis 1 states that within-organization increases in first-level leaders’ use of implementation leadership behavior will improve the EBP implementation climate within their organization (path a). Hypothesis 2 states that within-organization increases in EBP implementation climate will contribute to increases in clinicians’ use of EBP, controlling for implementation leadership (path b). Hypothesis 4 states that within-organization increases in implementation leadership will indirectly improve clinicians’ EBP use via within-organization improvement in EBP implementation climate (path a × path b). Path coefficients are estimated using econometric two-way fixed effects regression models at the organization level; they represent the relationships between within-organization change in the antecedent and within-organization change in the consequent, controlling for all stable organizational characteristics, population trends in the consequents over time, and time-varying covariates of molar organizational climate, transformational leadership, and workforce composition (see Table 3, k = 73, N = 30)
Continuous variable analyses testing study hypotheses
| Consequents | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EBP implementation climate | Clinician use of EBP | Clinician use of non-EBP | |||||||
| Antecedents | |||||||||
| EBP implementation climate | .36 | .13 | .009 | .10 | .13 | .424 | |||
| Implementation leadership | .44 | .14 | .004 | − .00 | .12 | .976 | − .13 | .12 | .305 |
| Transformational leadership | − .10 | .16 | .546 | − .15 | .13 | .245 | − .12 | .13 | .359 |
| Molar organizational climate | .01 | .01 | .101 | − .01 | .01 | .239 | .01 | .01 | .179 |
| Clinicians’ average years of experience | − .02 | .01 | .197 | .03 | .01 | .011 | .02 | .01 | .030 |
| Model | .59 | .33 | .19 | ||||||
K = 73 observations across N = 30 organizations. These are two-way fixed effects regression models which estimate the conditional, within-organization effect of change in each antecedent variable on change in the consequent, controlling for all other variables in the model as well as population trends in the consequent over time and all stable organizational characteristics. EBP evidence-based practice. EBP use is measured as clinicians’ use of cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy techniques; non-EBP use is measured as clinicians’ use of psychodynamic psychotherapy techniques. Indirect effect of implementation leadership on clinician EBP use via EBP implementation climate = .16 (95% CI = .03 to .33)
Descriptive statistics for study variables at baseline and change in variables across waves
| Variable | Wave 1 | Δ from wave 1 to wave 2 | Δ from wave 2 to wave 3 | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | |||||||||||||
| Ave. clinician use of CBT techniques (1–5) | 3.18 | .42 | 2.39 | 4.22 | .11 | .30 | − .43 | .65 | 63% | − .01 | .33 | − 1.00 | .48 | 46% |
| Ave. clinician use of psychodynamic techniques (1–5) | 3.35 | .32 | 2.80 | 4.07 | .02 | .26 | − .32 | .76 | 53% | .09 | .29 | − .60 | .73 | 68% |
| Implementation leadership (0–4) | 2.79 | .69 | .85 | 4.00 | − .04 | .79 | − 1.25 | 2.14 | 63% | .04 | .58 | − 1.57 | 1.01 | 54% |
| EBP implementation climate (0–4) | 2.05 | .52 | 1.11 | 3.30 | .01 | .54 | − 1.13 | .96 | 58% | − .01 | .45 | − 1.17 | .67 | 50% |
| Molar organizational climate (μ = 50, σ = 10) | 59.02 | 14.52 | 15.41 | 84.43 | 4.76 | 14.97 | − 18.47 | 43.36 | 53% | − 2.43 | 9.04 | − 22.23 | 11.81 | 47% |
| Transformational leadership (0–4) | 2.76 | .67 | .74 | 3.58 | .05 | .74 | − 1.42 | 2.21 | 42% | .13 | .56 | − 1.12 | 1.29 | 58% |
K = 73 observations across N = 30 organizations. CBT cognitive behavioral therapy; Δ = change; % Δ by +/− 0.5 SD = percent of organizations that changed by plus or minus one-half a standard deviation which is equal to a moderate effect size (Cohen’s d). Waves are spaced approximately 2 years apart
Fig. 2Wave-to-wave, within-organization change in implementation leadership, EBP implementation climate, and clinician CBT use. Each line depicts change in the raw observed scores of a single organization (k = 30). Waves are spaced approximately two years apart. CBT cognitive behavioral therapy, EBP evidence-based practice
Generalized difference-in-differences analyses testing study hypotheses
| Consequents | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EBP implementation climate | Clinician use of EBP | Clinician use of non-EBP | |||||||
| Exposures and controls | |||||||||
| High EBP implementation climate | .23 | .08 | .007 | .08 | .08 | .311 | |||
| High implementation leadership | .48 | .19 | .017 | − .03 | .10 | .740 | − .06 | .10 | .545 |
| Transformational leadership | − .08 | .21 | .697 | − .08 | .10 | .425 | − .18 | .10 | .095 |
| Molar organizational climate | .02 | .01 | .087 | − .01 | .01 | .335 | .01 | .01 | .248 |
| Clinicians’ average years of experience | − .02 | .02 | .343 | .03 | .01 | .007 | .02 | .01 | .037 |
| Cohen’s | .92 | .55 | .25 | ||||||
K = 73 observations across N = 30 organizations. These are two-way fixed effects regression models. Exposures for implementation leadership and EBP implementation climate are coded as Low = 0 and High = 1 based on a median split. EBP evidence-based practice. EBP use is measured as clinicians’ use of cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy techniques; non-EBP use is measured as clinicians’ use of psychodynamic psychotherapy techniques. The indirect effect of exposure to improved implementation leadership on clinicians’ EBP use via improved EBP implementation climate is d = .26