对新西兰、加拿大和瑞典的心理健康政策实施工作和支持这些工作的中介机构进行审查:一项比较案例研究。

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Frontiers in health services Pub Date : 2024-08-21 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frhs.2024.1371207
Heather L Bullock, John N Lavis, Gillian Mulvale, Michael G Wilson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:在各个系统中实施有实证依据的政策和实践是一项复杂的、多方面的工作,往往需要动员来自不同背景的多个组织。为了推动这一进程,政策制定者、创新开发者和服务提供者越来越多地要求中介机构支持实施工作,但人们对中介机构如何促进实施工作却知之甚少。本研究探讨了中介机构在新西兰、安大略省、加拿大和瑞典的精神健康和成瘾系统中支持实施循证政策和实践的作用:我们采用比较案例研究方法和综合知识转化方法,借鉴已有的解释框架和实施理论来解决三个问题:(1) 为什么要建立中介机构?(2) 中介机构的结构如何,它们在系统中使用了哪些策略来支持政策方针的实施?数据收集包括三次实地考察、49 次关键信息提供者访谈和文件分析:结果:在每个辖区,一系列独特的问题(如涉及精神疾病患者的负面事件)、政策(如对现 行政策有效性的反馈)和政治事件(如政府更迭)被政策企业家结合在一起,从而将中介机构提 上了决策议程。虽然中介机构的结构和特点千差万别,但它们使用的策略和不使用的策略却惊人地相似。特别值得注意的是,没有一家中介机构采用直接面向公众的战略,也没有采用审计和反馈的战略。这也是主要的政策难题。通过分析,我们发现了没有采用这些策略的五个原因:(1)他们需要与政策参与者建立/保持健康的关系;(2)他们需要与服务提供系统参与者建立/保持健康的关系;(3)与其他系统参与者的角色差异;(4)认为与政策中介的角色缺乏 "契合度";以及(5)资源限制导致无法开展密集的分布式(计划层面)工作:决策者和实施者必须考虑支持实施的能力,我们的研究确定了如何发展和利用中介机构来支持实施过程。
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An examination of mental health policy implementation efforts and the intermediaries that support them in New Zealand, Canada and Sweden: a comparative case study.

Introduction: The implementation of evidence-informed policies and practices across systems is a complex, multifaceted endeavor, often requiring the mobilization of multiple organizations from a range of contexts. In order to facilitate this process, policy makers, innovation developers and service deliverers are increasingly calling upon intermediaries to support implementation, yet relatively little is known about precisely how they contribute to implementation. This study examines the role of intermediaries supporting the implementation of evidence-informed policies and practices in the mental health and addictions systems of New Zealand, Ontario, Canada and Sweden.

Methods: Using a comparative case study methodology and taking an integrated knowledge translation approach, we drew from established explanatory frameworks and implementation theory to address three questions: (1) Why were the intermediaries established? (2) How are intermediaries structured and what strategies do they use in systems to support the implementation of policy directions? and (3) What explains the lack of use of particular strategies? Data collection included three site visits, 49 key informant interviews and document analysis.

Results: In each jurisdiction, a unique set of problems (e.g., negative events involving people with mental illness), policies (e.g., feedback on effectiveness of existing policies) and political events (e.g., changes in government) were coupled by a policy entrepreneur to bring intermediaries onto the decision agenda. While intermediaries varied greatly in their structure and characteristics, both the strategies they used and the strategies they didn't use were surprisingly similar. Specifically it was notable that none of the intermediaries used strategies that directly targeted the public, nor used audit and feedback. This emerged as the principle policy puzzle. Our analysis identified five reasons for these strategies not being employed: (1) their need to build/maintain healthy relationships with policy actors; (2) their need to build/maintain healthy relationships with service delivery system actors; (3) role differentiation with other system actors; (4) perceived lack of "fit" with the role of policy intermediaries; and (5) resource limitations that preclude intensive distributed (program-level) work.

Conclusion: Policy makers and implementers must consider capacity to support implementation, and our study identifies how intermediaries can be developed and harnessed to support the implementation process.

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