| Literature DB >> 33272313 |
Bryan R Garner1, Sheila V Patel2, M Alexis Kirk3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The challenge of implementing evidence-based innovations within practice settings is a significant public health issue that the field of implementation research (IR) is focused on addressing. Significant amounts of funding, time, and effort have been invested in IR to date, yet there remains significant room for advancement, especially regarding IR's development of scientific theories as defined by the National Academy of Sciences (i.e., a comprehensive explanation of the relationship between variables that is supported by a vast body of evidence). Research priority setting (i.e., promoting consensus about areas where research effort will have wide benefits to society) is a key approach to helping accelerate research advancements. Thus, building upon existing IR, general principles of data reduction, and a general framework for moderated mediation, this article identifies four priority domains, three priority aims, and four testable hypotheses for IR, which we organize in the priority aims and testable hypotheses (PATH) diagram.Entities:
Keywords: Implementation research; Implementation science; Priority setting
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33272313 PMCID: PMC7716483 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-020-01535-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Domains included in several existing implementation research models/frameworks
| Implementation research model/framework | List of domains |
|---|---|
| Proctor et al. (2009)—a conceptual model of implementation research [ | Intervention strategies, implementation strategies, outcomes |
| Damschroder et al. (2009)—the consolidated framework for implementation research [ | Intervention characteristics, outer setting, inner setting, characteristics of the individuals involved, process of implementation |
| Aarons et al. (2011)—conceptual model of evidence-based practice implementation in public service sectors [ | Outer context, inner context, innovation characteristics and intervention developers, innovation/system fit, innovation/organization fit, interconnections |
The priority domains for implementation research
| Priority domain (acronym) | Brief description | Justification |
|---|---|---|
| Implementation strategies (IS) | Strategies used to put into practice a program of known dimensions (e.g., EBP) | [ |
| Evidence-based measures of implementation (EBMI) | A measure shown to be predictive of improvement in one or more key HHROs (e.g., client outcomes) | [ |
| Health and health-related outcomes (HHRO) | End-points regarding evidence-based process of care, client/patient outcomes, or population outcomes | [ |
| Context-related moderators/mediators (CRMM) | Measures of the outer setting/context or inner setting/context that are hypothesized to moderate and/or mediate relationships between the other domains (i.e., IS, HHRO, EBMI) | [ |
IS implementation strategies, EBMI evidence-based measure of implementation, HHRO health and health-related outcomes, CRRM context-related moderators/mediators, EBP evidence-based practice
Fig. 1Priority aims for implementation research
The priority aims for implementation research
| Priority aim | Type |
|---|---|
| Advance generalizable knowledge regarding the IS ➔ HHRO relationship | Path C implementation research |
| Advance generalizable knowledge regarding the IS ➔ EBMI relationship | Path A implementation research |
| Advance generalizable knowledge regarding the EBMI ➔ HHRO relationship | Path B implementation research |
IS implementation strategies, HHRO health and health-related outcomes, EBMI evidence-based measures of implementation
Fig. 2Priority hypotheses for implementation research
The priority testable hypotheses for implementation research
| Priority testable hypothesis | Type |
|---|---|
| Cost-effectiveness hypotheses from a superiority trial | URQ hypotheses |
| Effectiveness hypotheses from a superiority trial | ULQ hypotheses |
| Effectiveness hypotheses from a non-inferiority trial | LLQ hypotheses |
| Cost-effectiveness hypotheses from A non-inferiority trial | LRQ hypotheses |
URQ upper right quadrant, ULQ upper left quadrant, LLQ lower left quadrant, LRQ lower right quadrant
Data elements
| Variable | Format | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Article identifiers | ||
| First author | Free text | Last name of the article’s first author |
| Title | Free text | Title of the article |
| Publication year | Numerical | Year in which the article was published |
| Article type | Categorical | Whether the article is labeled as a research article or short report by the journal |
| Primary question: to what extent have the PATH4IR Project’s priority domains, aims, and testable hypotheses been studied in IR to date? | ||
| IS | Dichotomous | Whether the study develops or assesses an IS |
| Categorical | If yes, whether the implementation strategies of interest are evaluative and iterative, provide interactive assistance, adapt and tailor to context, develop stakeholder interrelationships, train and educate stakeholders, support clinicians, engage consumers, utilize financial strategies, or change infrastructure | |
| Free text | If yes, lists the IS of interest | |
| HHRO | Dichotomous | Whether the study assesses an HHRO |
| Free text | If yes, lists the HHRO of interest | |
| EBMI | Dichotomous | Whether the study assesses an EBMI |
| Free text | If yes, lists the EBMI of interest | |
| CRMM | Dichotomous | Whether the study assesses a contextual factor as a moderator or mediator in some relationship |
| Categorical | If yes, whether the contextual factors of interest are related to intervention characteristics (e.g., complexity), outer setting (e.g., external policies and incentives), inner setting (e.g., leadership engagement), individual characteristics (e.g., staff perceptions about the intervention), or the implementation process (e.g., extent of planning ahead of implementation) | |
| Path C | Dichotomous | Whether the study assessed the IS ➔ HHRO relationship |
| Path A | Dichotomous | Whether the study assessed the IS ➔ EBMI relationship |
| Path B | Dichotomous | Whether the study assessed the EBMI ➔ HHRO relationship |
| URQ hypothesis | Dichotomous | Whether the study tested a URQ hypothesis |
| ULQ hypothesis | Dichotomous | Whether the study tested a ULQ hypothesis |
| LLQ hypothesis | Dichotomous | Whether the study tested an LLQ hypothesis |
| LRQ hypothesis | Dichotomous | Whether the study tested an LRQ hypothesis |
| Secondary question: Which other domains have been studied in IR to date? | ||
| Implementation outcome | Dichotomous | Whether the study assesses an implementation outcome that is not yet evidence-based |
| Categorical | If yes, whether the implementation outcomes of interest are related to acceptability, adoption, appropriateness, feasibility, fidelity, implementation cost, penetration, or sustainability | |
| Free text | If yes, lists the contextual factors of interest | |
| Context generally | Dichotomous | Whether the study considers the implementation context without assessing it as a moderator or mediator in some relationship |
| Categorical | If yes, whether the contextual factors of interest are related to intervention characteristics (e.g., complexity), outer setting (e.g., external policies and incentives), inner setting (e.g., leadership engagement), individual characteristics (e.g., staff perceptions about the intervention), or the implementation process (e.g., extent of planning ahead of implementation) | |
| Free text | If yes, lists the contextual factors of interest | |
| Other domain | Free text | Lists domains other than IS, HHRO, EBMI, implementation outcomes, CRMM, or context generally that are studied |
| Secondary question: Which other aims have been studied in IR to date? | ||
| Path A-ish | Dichotomous | Whether the study assessed the IS ➔ implementation outcome relationship |
| Other aim | Free text | Lists relationships other than path C, path A, path A-ish, and path B that are studied |
| Secondary question: Which other hypotheses have been tested in IR to date? | ||
| Other hypothesis | Free text | Lists testable hypotheses other than URQ, ULQ, LLQ, and LRQ that are studied |
URQ upper right quadrant, ULQ upper left quadrant, LLQ lower left quadrant, LRQ lower right quadrant
Fig. 3The PATH diagram for implementation research