Implementing, embedding and integrating self-management support tools for people with long-term conditions in primary care nursing: a qualitative study
Implementing, embedding and integrating self-management support tools for people with long-term conditions in primary care nursing: a qualitative study
Background
An implementation gap exists between policy aspirations for provision and the delivery of self-management support in primary care. An evidence based training and support package using a whole systems approach implemented as part of a randomised controlled trial was delivered to general practice staff. The trial found no effect of the intervention on patient outcomes. This paper explores why self-management support failed to become part of normal practice. We focussed on implementation of tools which capture two key aspects of self-management support – education (guidebooks for patients) and forming collaborative partnerships (a shared decision-making tool).
Objectives
To evaluate the implementation and embedding of self-management support in a United Kingdom primary care setting.
Design
Qualitative semi-structured interviews with primary care professionals.
Settings
12 General Practices in the Northwest of England located within a deprived inner city area.
Participants
Practices were approached 3–6 months after undergoing training in a self-management support approach. A pragmatic sample of 37 members of staff – General Practitioners, nurses, and practice support staff from 12 practices agreed to take part. The analysis is based on interviews with 11 practice nurses and one assistant practitioner; all were female with between 2 and 21 years’ experience of working in general practice.
Methods
A qualitative design involving face-to-face, semi-structured interviews audio-recorded and transcribed. Normalisation Process Theory framework allowed a systematic evaluation of the factors influencing the work required to implement the tools.
Findings
The guidebooks were embedded in daily practice but the shared decision-making tools were not. Guidebooks were considered to enhance patient-centredness and were minimally disruptive. Practice nurses were reluctant to engage with behaviour change discussions. Self-management support was not formulated as a practice priority and there was minimal support for this activity within the practice: it was not auditable; was insufficiently differentiated from existing content and processes of work to value in its own right, and considered too disruptive and time-consuming.
Conclusion
Supporting self-management through the encouragement of lifestyle change was problematic to realise with limited evidence of the development of the needed collaborative partnerships between patients and practitioners required by the ethos of self-management support.
long-term conditions, normalisation process theory, nursing, primary care, self-management support
1103-1113
Kennedy, Anne
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Rogers, Anne
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Bowen, Robert
8a2fb064-d46c-4545-a6e5-ea07095721c5
Lee, Victoria
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Blakeman, Tom
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Gardner, Caroline
d99612f8-f7d7-4b42-9d4b-287202c8117c
Morris, Rebecca
bd538c3b-0048-4e59-a61d-54335a4aeac1
Protheroe, Joanne
ef666365-4f77-4c8c-9471-967b084dff81
Chew-Graham, Carolyn
530beade-2b1c-4eea-846f-1fcef0585ca5
August 2014
Kennedy, Anne
e059c1c7-d6d0-41c8-95e1-95e5273b07f8
Rogers, Anne
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Bowen, Robert
8a2fb064-d46c-4545-a6e5-ea07095721c5
Lee, Victoria
49d81914-cd51-4e61-9cd1-cef1cb069d1e
Blakeman, Tom
805f6f85-5cf2-4c4b-b6b6-c94ee0e46a8e
Gardner, Caroline
d99612f8-f7d7-4b42-9d4b-287202c8117c
Morris, Rebecca
bd538c3b-0048-4e59-a61d-54335a4aeac1
Protheroe, Joanne
ef666365-4f77-4c8c-9471-967b084dff81
Chew-Graham, Carolyn
530beade-2b1c-4eea-846f-1fcef0585ca5
Kennedy, Anne, Rogers, Anne, Bowen, Robert, Lee, Victoria, Blakeman, Tom, Gardner, Caroline, Morris, Rebecca, Protheroe, Joanne and Chew-Graham, Carolyn
(2014)
Implementing, embedding and integrating self-management support tools for people with long-term conditions in primary care nursing: a qualitative study.
International Journal of Nursing Studies, 51 (8), .
(doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2013.11.008).
(PMID:24373719)
Abstract
Background
An implementation gap exists between policy aspirations for provision and the delivery of self-management support in primary care. An evidence based training and support package using a whole systems approach implemented as part of a randomised controlled trial was delivered to general practice staff. The trial found no effect of the intervention on patient outcomes. This paper explores why self-management support failed to become part of normal practice. We focussed on implementation of tools which capture two key aspects of self-management support – education (guidebooks for patients) and forming collaborative partnerships (a shared decision-making tool).
Objectives
To evaluate the implementation and embedding of self-management support in a United Kingdom primary care setting.
Design
Qualitative semi-structured interviews with primary care professionals.
Settings
12 General Practices in the Northwest of England located within a deprived inner city area.
Participants
Practices were approached 3–6 months after undergoing training in a self-management support approach. A pragmatic sample of 37 members of staff – General Practitioners, nurses, and practice support staff from 12 practices agreed to take part. The analysis is based on interviews with 11 practice nurses and one assistant practitioner; all were female with between 2 and 21 years’ experience of working in general practice.
Methods
A qualitative design involving face-to-face, semi-structured interviews audio-recorded and transcribed. Normalisation Process Theory framework allowed a systematic evaluation of the factors influencing the work required to implement the tools.
Findings
The guidebooks were embedded in daily practice but the shared decision-making tools were not. Guidebooks were considered to enhance patient-centredness and were minimally disruptive. Practice nurses were reluctant to engage with behaviour change discussions. Self-management support was not formulated as a practice priority and there was minimal support for this activity within the practice: it was not auditable; was insufficiently differentiated from existing content and processes of work to value in its own right, and considered too disruptive and time-consuming.
Conclusion
Supporting self-management through the encouragement of lifestyle change was problematic to realise with limited evidence of the development of the needed collaborative partnerships between patients and practitioners required by the ethos of self-management support.
Text
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 19 November 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 November 2013
Published date: August 2014
Keywords:
long-term conditions, normalisation process theory, nursing, primary care, self-management support
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 365992
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/365992
ISSN: 0020-7489
PURE UUID: 446d4acc-75d5-454a-b85d-9635312aeff8
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Date deposited: 24 Jun 2014 11:18
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:03
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Contributors
Author:
Anne Kennedy
Author:
Robert Bowen
Author:
Victoria Lee
Author:
Tom Blakeman
Author:
Caroline Gardner
Author:
Rebecca Morris
Author:
Joanne Protheroe
Author:
Carolyn Chew-Graham
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