| Literature DB >> 34496978 |
Jennifer Leeman1, Catherine Rohweder2, Matthew Lee3, Alison Brenner4, Andrea Dwyer5, Linda K Ko6,7, Meghan C O'Leary8, Grace Ryan9, Thuy Vu6, Shoba Ramanadhan10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In several recent articles, authors have called for aligning the fields of implementation and improvement science. In this paper, we call for implementation science to also align with improvement practice. Multiple implementation scholars have highlighted the importance of designing implementation strategies to fit the existing culture, infrastructure, and practice of a healthcare system. Worldwide, healthcare systems are adopting improvement models as their primary approach to improving healthcare delivery and outcomes. The prevalence of improvement models raises the question of how implementation scientists might best align their efforts with healthcare systems' existing improvement infrastructure and practice. MAIN BODY: We describe three challenges and five benefits to aligning implementation science and improvement practice. Challenges include (1) use of different models, terminology, and methods, (2) a focus on generalizable versus local knowledge, and (3) limited evidence in support of the effectiveness of improvement tools and methods. We contend that implementation science needs to move beyond these challenges and work toward greater alignment with improvement practice. Aligning with improvement practice would benefit implementation science by (1) strengthening research/practice partnerships, (2) fostering local ownership of implementation, (3) generating practice-based evidence, (4) developing context-specific implementation strategies, and (5) building practice-level capacity to implement interventions and improve care. Each of these potential benefits is illustrated in a case study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Cancer Prevention and Control Research Network.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer prevention and control; Case studies; Implementation science; Improvement practice; Quality improvement
Year: 2021 PMID: 34496978 PMCID: PMC8424169 DOI: 10.1186/s43058-021-00201-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci Commun ISSN: 2662-2211
Sample improvement modelsa
| Quality improvement model | |
|---|---|
| Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) | |
| Donabedian Model | |
| European Foundation for Quality Management (EFQM) model | |
| ISO 9000-9004 (International Organization for Standardization) | |
| Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) Model | |
| Kooperation für Transparenz und Qualität im Krankenhaus (KTQ) | |
| Lean Management | |
| Malcolm Baldrige Quality Award (MBQA) | |
| Quality Improvement (QI) | |
| Six Sigma | |
| Strategic Collaborative Quality Management (SCQM) | |
| Total Quality Management (TQM) |
a Models were referenced at least 3 times according to [9, 11]
EBI evidence-based intervention, PDSA Plan-Do-Study-Act, HPV human papillomavirus, FIT fecal immunochemical test
Fig. 1Five case studies illustrating the five benefits of aligning implementation science and improvement practice within cancer prevention and control
Fig. 2Run chart of CRC test kit completion rates
Fig. 3Process flow diagram for lung cancer screening