• Implement Sci · Jan 2013

    Implementing a training intervention to support caregivers after stroke: a process evaluation examining the initiation and embedding of programme change.

    • David James Clarke, Mary Godfrey, Rebecca Hawkins, Euan Sadler, Geoffrey Harding, Anne Forster, Christopher McKevitt, Josie Dickerson, and Amanda Farrin.
    • Academic Unit of Elderly Care and Rehabilitation, Temple Bank House, Bradford Royal Infirmary, Bradford BD9 6RJ, UK. d.j.clarke@leeds.ac.uk.
    • Implement Sci. 2013 Jan 1;8:96.

    BackgroundMedical Research Council (MRC) guidance identifies implementation as a key element of the development and evaluation process for complex healthcare interventions. Implementation is itself a complex process involving the mobilization of human, material, and organizational resources to change practice within settings that have pre-existing structures, historical patterns of relationships, and routinized ways of working. Process evaluations enable researchers and clinicians to understand how implementation proceeds and what factors impact on intended program change. A qualitative process evaluation of the pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial; Training Caregivers after Stroke was conducted to examine how professionals were engaged in the work of delivering training; how they reached and involved caregivers for whom the intervention was most appropriate; how did those on whom training was targeted experience and respond to it. Normalization Process Theory, which focuses attention on implementing and embedding program change, was used as a sensitizing framework to examine selected findings.ResultsContextual factors including organizational history and team relationships, external policy, and service development initiatives, impinged on implementation of the caregiver training program in unintended ways that could not have been predicted through focus on mechanisms of individual and collective action at unit level. Factors that facilitated or impeded the effectiveness of the cascade training model used, whether and how stroke unit teams made sense of and engaged individually and collectively with a complex caregiver training intervention, and what impact these factors had on embedding the intervention in routine stroke unit practice were identified.ConclusionsWhere implementation of complex interventions depends on multiple providers, time needs to be invested in reaching agreement on who will take responsibility for delivery of specific components and in determining how implementation and its effectiveness will be monitored. This goes beyond concern with intervention fidelity; explicit consideration also needs to be given to the implementation process in terms of how program change can be effected at organizational, practice, and service delivery levels. Normalization Process Theory's constructs help identify vulnerable features of implementation processes in respect of the work involved in embedding complex interventions.

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