Michael Wensing, Marije Bosh, and Richard Grol
Scientific Institute for Quality in Healthcare, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
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Chronic Heart Failure
- Major variations in treatment repeatedly found
- Use of beta-blockers in primary care ranged from 10% to 50% between countries
- Use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE-I) ranged from 50% to 75%
- Differences in national guideline recommendations not sufficient to explain variation
- Comorbidity explained some variation, but 14% of prescriptions related to patient characteristics, not evidence
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Study of barriers to adherence to heart failure guidelines found:
- Physicians found it difficult to change treatment initiated by cardiologist
- Titrating the ACE-I dose was seen as difficult
- Initiating ACE-I in patients already using a diuretic or stable on their current medication was seen as a barrier
- So…how to improve primary care for chronic heart failure and which interventions to select?
Interventions to facilitate uptake of research
- Training for physicians?
- Use of opinion leaders to influence prescribing patterns of cardiologists?
- Providing financial incentives to physicians for each heart failure patient treated according to guideline recommendations?
- Inform the patient and family about appropriate heart failure care?
How to choose an intervention?
- Ideally guided by research evidence on the effectiveness and efficiency of the intervention
- Many KT interventions have not been well-evaluated in rigorous studies
- Available evidence suggests that interventions have variable impact and effect size is moderate
- Current research evidence cannot guide the implementer on the best choice of intervention.
- In addition to “science” we need “art” to choose or design a KT intervention
Professional interventions
- Available evidence focuses mainly on professional interventions (education programs, feedback and reminders)
- Methodological quality is variable but overall is only moderate
- Overall absolute change of professional performance is usually not more than 10%
- Such changes can be clinically or economically relevant
Passive vs active educational interventions
- Passive (written guidelines, lectures and conferences) unlikely to change professional behavior if used alone
- Active (outreach visits and quality circles of professionals) are more likely to induce change
- Active self-study materials or web sites can be effective
Other interventions
- Interventions that bring information close to the point of decision making (reminders, decision support) are likely to be effective
- Patient-directed interventions (preconsultation questionnaires or decision aids) can support quality improvement, but insight into effects on quality of care is limited
- Organizational interventions (revision of professional roles and multidisciplinary teams) can influence clinical outcomes and efficiency – impact on KT is unclear, but improve efficiency and patient satisfaction
- Financial interventions influence volumes of health care use – effect on appropriateness of clinical decisions and practice patterns is unclear
Art of selecting a KT intervention
- Use structured approach to address professionals, patients, teams, organizations and wider systems
- Can include intervention mapping, marketing, proceed/proceed, quality cycle, change management, organizational development, community development, and health technology assessment
- Unclear whether structured approaches result in better knowledge uptake
- Planning models for change propose more or less the same steps or stages, but vary in number
What are the objectives for KT?
- Objectives should be related to outcomes for patients, populations, and society
- Many KT objectives have been defined in terms of specific changes in treatments or other aspects of health care delivery
- Expectation is that changes result in better outcomes
- Often strong research evidence to support this expectation is not available
- Several methods can be used to select objectives, such as a Delphi procedure (Linestone & Turoff 1975)
What are the indicators that can be used to measure implementation?
- Objectives needs to be defined in terms of specific indicators used to measure degree of implementation
- Indicators should have good measurement properties (support from key stakeholders and high feasibility in use)
- Current best practice is a structured Delphi procedure with panels of stakeholders who review available evidence, followed by a test in real practice
- Research of practice variation and quality assessment (chart audits, patient surveys, video observations, and secondary analysis of routine data)
What are potential barriers to change?
- Should analyze barriers to change for each chosen objective:
- Barriers for change as reported by professionals, patients and others – interviews, questionnaires and group methods
- Variation in health care delivery across patients – large observational datasets and statistical methods
- Determinants of effectiveness of KT interventions – longitudinal datasets and advanced quantitative methods
How can we link KT interventions to these barriers?
- Once objectives have been chosen and barriers identified, next step is to link specific KT interventions to the barriers
- Most creative step in the design of KT programs
- Both exploratory and theory-inspired methods can be used
- Exploratory methods try to avoid implicit assumptions – advocate using an “open mind” – often use group brainstorming to identify solutions (live or electronic using Internet platforms)
- Theory used to understand the factors that determine practice variation and change – decision can be taken in a group as well
- Next slides link KT interventions to a number of theory-based factors
Objectives refer to (or target of the intervention) | Barriers for change | Theory | KT interventions (examples) |
---|---|---|---|
1. Cognitive factors | |||
Information behavior | Learning style, learning conceptions, innovation adoption behavior, use of communication channels | Cognitive theory on learning (Norman 2002) | Use various information delivery methods or adapt to individual needs |
Domain knowledge | Domain knowledge, professional knowledge, complexity of the innovation, intelligence, cognitive competences | Cognitive theory on learning (Norman 2002) | Change the mix of professional skills in the organization |
2. Motivational factors | |||
Motivation | Intentional goal setting, stages of change, persuasion |
Theory on motivation for learning (Newman & Peile 2002) Theory on stages of change (Prochaska & Velicer 1997) Theory on adopter characteristics (Rogers 1995) |
Provide information, social influence, action planning according to needs |
Beliefs about consequences | Outcome expectancies, attributions or behavior, impact, centrality, duration of the innovation |
Social cognitive theory (Bandura 1986) Theory on innovation characteristics (Rogers 1995) |
Provide education and feedback, adapt the innovation to improve consequences |
Attitudes | Attitudes, utilities, advantage, costs, risks of the innovation | Theory of planned behavior (Ajzen 1991) | Provide education on consequences |
Perceived subjective norms | Perceptions of other behavior, social, professional role, compatibility, visibility of the innovation, social comparison | Theory of planned behavior (Ajzen 1991) | Organize social influence |
Beliefs about capabilities | Perceived behavioral control, self-confidence |
Social cognitive theory (Bandura 1986) Theory of planned behavior (Ajzen 1991) |
Provide skills training |
Emotion | Satisfaction with performance, attractiveness of the innovation | Theory on motivation for learning (Newman & Peile 2002) | Provide feedback; provide education and counseling to change individual standards |
3. Behavioral factors | |||
Behavioral regulation | Coping behaviors, observational learning, central/peripheral route |
Social cognitive theory (Bandura 1986) Coping Theory (Lazarus & Folkman 1984) |
Provide feedback and reminders to enable self-regulation; provide education and counseling to change individual standards |
Skills | Competence, behavioral capability, flexibility, divisibility, triability of the innovation | Cognitive theory on learning (Norman 2002) | Provide education to improve competency; use decision support systems |
4. Interaction in professional teams | |||
Team cognitions | Objectives, group vision, task orientation, group norms |
Theory on team effectiveness (DeDreu & Weingart 2003) Theory on group decisions (Turner & Pratkanis 1998) |
Change team members or decision processes |
Team processes | Group composition, participation safety |
Theory on team effectiveness (De Dreu & Weingart 2003) Theory on group decisions (Turner & Pratkanis 1998) |
Training to change group processes |
5. Structure of professional networks | |||
Leadership and key individuals | Change agents, opinion leaders, source of the message |
Theory on persuasion (Petty, Wegener & Fabrigar 1997) Theory on leadership (Yukl 1998) |
Identify and involve formal and informal leaders |
Social network characteristics | Range, density, multiplexity, weak ties, etc. |
Social support theory (Hogan, Linden & Najarian 2002) Theory on Social comparison (Suls, Martin & Wheeler 2002) Theory on diffusion of innovations (Rogers 1995) |
Involve change agents to transfer information; develop networks to create more “weak” linkages |
6. Organizational structures | |||
Specifications | Clinical protocols, benchmarking, systems perspective |
Disease management systems (Hunter 2000) Theory on organizational innovativeness (Damanpour 1991) |
Implement integrated care systems, e.g. chronic care model |
Flexibility | Flexible delivery system, minimum specification, formalization, fragmentation, operational variety |
Complex adaptive systems (Plesk & Greenhalgh 2001) Theory on organizational innovativeness (Damanpour 1991) |
Redesign specific services in the organization |
Leadership structure | Constancy of purpose, management in different stages, centralization, management attitudes/tenure, administrative intensity |
Theory on quality management (Prajogo & Sohal 2001) Theory on organizational innovativeness (Damanpour 1991) |
Recruit and train to have specific types of leaders |
Specialization | Differentiation, professionalism | Theory on organizational innovativeness (Damanpour 1991) | Change the mix of professional skills in the organization |
7. Organizational processes | |||
Continuous improvement | Training of professionals, talent-developing programs, process mindedness, continuous education, concern for measurement, experimental mindset |
Theory on quality management (Prajogo & Sohal 2001) Theory on organizational learning (Senge 1990) |
Create teams for improvement |
External communication | Customer mindedness, reactiveness, scanning imperative, complexity, external influence, suppliers as partners |
Theory on quality management (Prajogo & Sohal 2001) Theory on organizational innovativeness (Damanpour 1991) |
Undertake patient satisfaction activities |
Internal communications | Climate of openness, generative relationships, involvement of nonmedical professionals, employee mindedness, cooperation focus, multiple advocates, ownership, cultural diversity, involvement of target group |
Theory on quality management (Prajogo & Sohal 2001) Theory on organizational innovativeness (Damanpour 1991) Theory on organizational learning (Senge 1990) Theory on knowledge management (Garavelli, Gorgoglione & Scozzi 2002) Theory on organizational culture (Scott, Mannion, Davies & Marshall 2003) |
Undertake care provider satisfaction activities; use ICT for transfer of information |
8. Organizational resources | |||
Technical knowledge | Competence base, organizational intelligence, creativity, knowledge information systems | Theory on organizational innovativeness (Damanpour 1991) | Change the mix of professional skills in the organization |
Organizational size | Size of teams | Theory on organizational innovativeness (Damanpour 1991) | Merge/split organizations or departments |
9. Societal factors | |||
Professional development | Education and legal protection related to body of knowledge | Theory on professional development (Freidson 1970) | Revise professional roles |
Priority on societal agenda | Public relations, political action | Theory on agenda building (Walters, Walters & Gray 1996) | Undertake activities to influence policy makers |
10. Financial incentives | |||
Positive incentives | Rewards, simple attractors, resources, structures for rewards, slack resources, support for innovation, provider utility function | Theory on financial reimbursement (Sonnad & Foreman 1997) | Change the provider reimbursement and patient copayment |
Provider and patient financial risk sharing | Budgets, capitation, etc., supplier induced demand | Theory on financial reimbursement (Sonnad & Foreman 1997) | Change the provider reimbursement and patient copayment |
Transaction costs | Cost improvement, switching costs related to innovation | Theory on contracting (Chalkley & Malcomson 1998) | Change the financial system for health care |
Competition intensity | Maturity of the market | Theory on competition and innovation (Funk 2002) | Introduce market characteristics, such as financial risk and improved information for users |
11. Regulations |
What factors should we consider when deciding to use a single or multicomponent KT intervention?
- Early research suggested that multicomponent interventions for KT are most effective (addressed a larger number of barriers for change)
- Later research raised doubts about this…
- Not clear what constitutes a “single intervention”
- Is an outreach visit that includes instruction, motivation, planning of improvement, and practical help a “single intervention”?
- Is an intervention that combines different types of professional education (e.g., lectures, materials, and workshops) that all address lack of knowledge a “multicomponent intervention”?
- Multicomponent interventions could be more effective if they address different types of barriers for change
- The efficiency, feasibility and sustainability of multicomponent interventions needs to be evaluated
Future research
- How comprehensive and systematic does an analysis of determinants of change have to be?
- What is the added value of tailoring KT interventions?
- How should design KT programs be designed?
- What is the link between barriers for change and choice of KT interventions?
- How to best define testable hypotheses in unique and complex KT programs addressing multiple issues and stakeholders?
- How can the impact of KT interventions be sustained?
- How effective and efficient are systematic KT interventions development compared to pragmatic, simple methods for choosing interventions?
- How are different stakeholders best involved in KT intervention development?
- Continued research on the determinants of improvement in health care would also help guide the choice of KT interventions
Summary
- Choice of KT interventions remains an “art” informed by science
- Practice-based experience and creativity are important in selecting KT interventions
- Use a stepwise approach and structured methods helps take a comprehensive and balanced approach
- Research evidence on KT interventions can provide guidance, if only to show which interventions should be avoided