| Literature DB >> 33267844 |
Sam McCrabb1, Kaitlin Mooney2, Benjamin Elton3, Alice Grady2,3, Sze Lin Yoong2,3, Luke Wolfenden2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Optimisation processes have the potential to rapidly improve the impact of health interventions. Optimisation can be defined as a deliberate, iterative and data-driven process to improve a health intervention and/or its implementation to meet stakeholder-defined public health impacts within resource constraints. This study aimed to identify frameworks used to optimise the impact of health interventions and/or their implementation, and characterise the key concepts, steps or processes of identified frameworks.Entities:
Keywords: Framework; Implementation; Intervention; Intervention development; Optimisation; Public health; Scoping review
Year: 2020 PMID: 33267844 PMCID: PMC7709329 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09950-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Data extracted from each included study
| Classifications of data extracted | Data extracted | Data extracted- sub-categories |
|---|---|---|
| Study characteristics | Author | – |
| Year of publication | – | |
| Country | – | |
| Framework characteristics | Framework name | – |
| Description of the steps for optimisation | – | |
| Number of steps | – | |
| Figure available | Yes/No | |
| Framework format | Linear, cyclic, both linear and cyclic | |
| Description of optimisation endpoint | – | |
| What the framework optimises | Intervention, implementation, both | |
| Was the framework modified from another framework | Yes (and reference)/No | |
| Outcomes the frameworks were designed to improve | Implementation | Acceptability, adoption, appropriateness, costs, feasibility, fidelity, penetration, and sustainability |
| Service | Efficiency, safety, effectiveness, equity, patient-centeredness, and timeliness | |
| Patient | Satisfaction, function and symptomatology | |
| Other | – |
Fig. 1Flow diagram depicting the movement of studies through the review
Summary of characteristics of included frameworks
| Characteristic | Total = 20 |
|---|---|
| Number of steps, mean (SD) | 5.95 (1.99) |
| Figure available for framework (yes) | 14 (70%) |
| Explicit guidance for each step available (yes) | 19 (95%) |
| Framework format | |
| Linear | 4 (20%) |
| Cyclic | 8 (40%) |
| Both linear and cyclic | 8 (40%) |
| Endpoint specified (yes) | 6 (30%) |
| Optimisation focus | |
| Optimising Intervention | 8 (40%) |
| Optimising Implementation | 11 (55%) |
| Optimising both Intervention and Implementation | 1 (5%) |
| Modified from other frameworks (yes) | 6 (30%) |
Included review outcomes optimised by frameworks, mapped to 17 outcomes according to Proctor et al. [31]
| Outcome optimised by framework | Total | |
|---|---|---|
| Implementation | Acceptability: Satisfaction with various aspects of the innovation (e.g. content, complexity, comfort, delivery, and credibility) | 4 (20%) |
| Adoption: Uptake; utilisation; initial implementation; intention to try | 2 (10%) | |
| Appropriateness: Perceived fit; relevance; compatibility; suitability; usefulness; practicability | 2 (10%) | |
| Cost: Marginal cost; cost-effectiveness; cost-benefit | 7 (35%) | |
| Feasibility: Actual fit or utility; suitability for everyday use; practicability | 4 (20%) | |
| Fidelity: Delivered as intended; adherence; integrity; quality of program delivery | 4 (20%) | |
| Penetration: Level of institutionalisation, spread, service access | 1 (5%) | |
| Sustainability: Maintenance; continuation; durability; incorporation; integration; institutionalisation; sustained use; routinisation. | 4 (20%) | |
| Service | Efficiency: Avoiding waste, including waste of equipment, supplies, ideas, and energy. | 10 (50%) |
| Safety: Avoiding harm to patients from the care that is intended to help them. | 2 (10%) | |
| Effectiveness: A measure of how well a program/policy performs in a real world setting where variables cannot be controlled. | 11 (55%) | |
| Equity: Providing care that does not vary in quality because of personal characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and socioeconomic status. | 2 (10%) | |
| Patient-centredness: Providing care that is respectful of and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values and ensuring that patient values guide all clinical decisions. | 0 (0%) | |
| Timeliness: A measure of how often waits and harmful delays occur for both those who receive and those who give care. | 6 (30%) | |
| Patient | Patient' Satisfaction: extent to which a client is content with the service which they received. | 5 (25%) |
| Function: A measure of participant’s functional status e.g. their ability to perform normal daily activities required to meet basic needs, fulfil usual roles, and maintain health and well-being. | 3 (15%) | |
| Symptomatology: the set of symptoms characteristic of a medical condition or exhibited by a patient. | 1 (5%) |
Fig. 2Meta-framework to optimise interventions
Italics identifies sub-steps in this framework. Dotted lines indicates paths that interventions may take when following the framework. Not all intervention will return back to earlier steps, or they may return back to different steps depending on their progress through the framework
Fig. 3Meta-framework to optimise implementation
Italics identifies sub-steps in this framework. Dotted lines indicates paths that interventions may take when following the framework. Not all intervention will return back to earlier steps, or they may return back to a different steps depending on their progress through the framework