| Literature DB >> 34158115 |
Christine W Hartmann1,2, Ryann L Engle3, Camilla B Pimentel4,5,6, Whitney L Mills7,8, Valerie A Clark4, Virginia C Keleher9, Princess Nash9, Corilyn Ott9,10, Therasia Roland4, Sharon Sloup9, Barbara Frank11, Cathie Brady11, A Lynn Snow9,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Relatively little guidance exists on how to use virtual implementation facilitation to successfully implement evidence-based practices and innovations into clinical programs. Yet virtual methods are increasingly common. They have potentially wider reach, emergent public health situations necessitate their use, and restrictions on resources can make them more attractive. We therefore outline a set of principles for virtual external implementation facilitation and a series of recommendations based on extensive experience successfully using virtual external implementation facilitation in a national program. MODEL AND RECOMMENDATIONS: Success in virtual external implementation facilitation may be achieved by facilitators applying three overarching principles: pilot everything, incorporate a model, and prioritize metacognition. Five practical principles also help: plan in advance, communicate in real time, build relationships, engage participants, and construct a virtual room for participants. We present eight concrete suggestions for enacting the practical principles: (1) assign key facilitation roles to facilitation team members to ensure the program runs smoothly; (2) create small cohorts of participants so they can have meaningful interactions; (3) provide clarity and structure for all participant interactions; (4) structure program content to ensure key points are described, reinforced, and practiced; (5) use visuals to supplement audio content; (6) build activities into the agenda that enable participants to immediately apply knowledge at their own sites, separate from the virtual experience; (7) create backup plans whenever possible; and (8) engage all participants in the program. These principles represent a novel conceptualization of virtual external implementation facilitation, giving structure to a process that has been, to date, inadequately described. The associated actions are demonstrably useful in supporting the principles and offer teams interested in virtual external implementation facilitation concrete methods by which to ensure success. Our examples stem from experiences in healthcare. But the principles can, in theory, be applied to virtual external implementation facilitation regardless of setting, as they and the associated actions are not setting specific.Entities:
Keywords: External facilitation; Implementation facilitation; Methods; Quality improvement; Remote; Strategies; Virtual
Year: 2021 PMID: 34158115 PMCID: PMC8218278 DOI: 10.1186/s43058-021-00168-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci Commun ISSN: 2662-2211
Enacting practical principles: actions, descriptions, and examples
| Actions | Descriptions and examples |
|---|---|
| Assign facilitation roles | There may be several different facilitator roles (e.g., greeter, agenda facilitator, technical support) within a single virtual interaction. Be sure the external facilitators are clear on who is covering which facilitation roles. |
| Create small cohorts | If there are a large number of participants, deliberately separate participants into smaller groups (organized by facility, location, role, any other relevant characteristic) to enable engagement, sharing, and encourage more meaningful interactions. It may be important to construct smaller groups that avoid hierarchical dilemmas (e.g., separating senior leaders from frontline staff for potentially volatile or personal conversations or mixing sites so supervisors are not in the same group as their own supervisees). |
| Provide clarity and structure for interactions with/among participants | Explicitly outline for the participants who will be serving in the various facilitation roles. |
| Structure content | Providing structure for the program’s content ensures participants all have similar experiences and focus on the program’s content. |
| Use visuals | Adding visual components to an audio presentation will enhance participant engagement and keep their attention. Be succinct and use graphics to help convey your message. |
| Build in onsite activities separate from virtual experience | Create time in the agenda for participants to immediately apply learned knowledge in their local setting. Give participants a relatively simple task and reconvene the virtual group to discuss how it went and how to move forward. |
| Create backup plans | Have a plan in place in case there are issues with technology and be sure to have a way to communicate with your team outside of the online platform. |
| Engage everyone | Facilitators should invite each participant into conversations (via audio or chat), being mindful of group dynamics and continually focusing on collaborative subjects. |