Surfacing the causal assumptions and active ingredients of healthcare quality improvement interventions: An application to primary care opioid prescribing.

Implementation research and practice Pub Date : 2023-11-03 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26334895231206569
Nicola McCleary, Celia Laur, Justin Presseau, Gail Dobell, Jonathan M C Lam, Sharon Gushue, Katie Hagel, Lindsay Bevan, Lena Salach, Laura Desveaux, Noah M Ivers
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Abstract

Background: Efforts to maximize the impact of healthcare improvement interventions are hampered when intervention components are not well defined or described, precluding the ability to understand how and why interventions are expected to work.

Method: We partnered with two organizations delivering province-wide quality improvement interventions to establish how they envisaged their interventions lead to change (their underlying causal assumptions) and to identify active ingredients (behavior change techniques [BCTs]). The interventions assessed were an audit and feedback report and an academic detailing program. Both focused on supporting safer opioid prescribing in primary care in Ontario, Canada. Data collection involved semi-structured interviews with intervention developers (n = 8) and a content analysis of intervention documents. Analyses unpacked and articulated how the interventions were intended to achieve change and how this was operationalized.

Results: Developers anticipated that the feedback report would provide physicians with a clear understanding of their own prescribing patterns in comparison to others. In the feedback report, we found an emphasis on BCTs consistent with that assumption (feedback on behavior; social comparison). The detailing was designed to provide tailored support to enable physicians to overcome barriers to change and to gradually enact specific practice changes for patients based on improved communication. In the detailing materials, we found an emphasis on instructions on how to perform the behavior, for a range of behaviors (e.g., tapering opioids, treating opioid use disorder). The materials were supplemented by detailer-enacted BCTs (e.g., social support [practical]; goal setting [behavior]; review behavioral goal[s]).

Conclusions: The interventions included a small range of BCTs addressing various clinical behaviors. This work provides a methodological example of how to apply a behavioral lens to surface the active ingredients, target clinical behaviors, and causal assumptions of existing large-scale improvement interventions that could be applied in other contexts to optimize effectiveness and facilitate scale and spread.

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揭示医疗质量改善干预措施的因果假设和有效成分:在初级保健阿片类药物处方中的应用。
背景:当干预措施的组成部分没有得到很好的定义或描述,从而无法理解干预措施的作用方式和原因时,最大限度地提高医疗保健改善干预措施影响的努力就会受到阻碍。方法:我们与两个提供全省质量改进干预措施的组织合作,以确定他们如何设想他们的干预措施会导致变化(他们潜在的因果假设),并确定有效成分(行为改变技术[BCT])。评估的干预措施是一份审计和反馈报告以及一份学术详细计划。两者都专注于支持加拿大安大略省初级保健中更安全的阿片类药物处方。数据收集涉及对干预开发人员的半结构化访谈(n = 8) 以及对干预文件的内容分析。分析揭示并阐明了干预措施旨在如何实现变革以及如何实施变革。结果:开发人员预计,与其他人相比,反馈报告将让医生清楚地了解自己的处方模式。在反馈报告中,我们发现对BCT的强调与这一假设一致(对行为的反馈;社会比较)。详细设计旨在提供量身定制的支持,使医生能够克服变革的障碍,并在改善沟通的基础上逐步为患者制定具体的实践变革。在详细的材料中,我们发现重点是关于如何进行一系列行为的说明(例如,减少阿片类药物,治疗阿片类使用障碍)。这些材料由详细制定的BCT补充(例如,社会支持[实践];目标设定[行为];回顾行为目标[s])。结论:干预措施包括针对各种临床行为的小范围BCT。这项工作提供了一个方法论例子,说明如何应用行为透镜来揭示现有大规模改善干预措施的活性成分、目标临床行为和因果假设,这些干预措施可以应用于其他情况,以优化有效性并促进规模和传播。
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