Implementation of secondary fracture prevention services after hip fracture: a qualitative study using extended Normalization Process Theory
Implementation of secondary fracture prevention services after hip fracture: a qualitative study using extended Normalization Process Theory
BACKGROUND:
National and international guidance emphasizes the need for hospitals to have effective secondary fracture prevention services, to reduce the risk of future fractures in hip fracture patients. Variation exists in how hospitals organize these services, and there remain significant gaps in care. No research has systematically explored reasons for this to understand how to successfully implement these services. The objective of this study was to use extended Normalization Process Theory to understand how secondary fracture prevention services can be successfully implemented.
METHODS:
Forty-three semi-structured interviews were conducted with healthcare professionals involved in delivering secondary fracture prevention within 11 hospitals that receive patients with acute hip fracture in one region in England. These included orthogeriatricians, fracture prevention nurses and service managers. Extended Normalization Process Theory was used to inform study design and analysis.
RESULTS:
Extended Normalization Process Theory specifies four constructs relating to collective action in service implementation: capacity, potential, capability and contribution. The capacity of healthcare professionals to co-operate and co-ordinate their actions was achieved using dedicated fracture prevention co-ordinators to organize important processes of care. However, participants described effective communication with GPs as challenging. Individual potential and commitment to operationalize services was generally high. Shared commitments were promoted through multi-disciplinary team working, facilitated by fracture prevention co-ordinators. Healthcare professionals had capacity to deliver multiple components of services when co-ordinators 'freed up' time. As key agents in its intervention, fracture prevention coordinators were therefore indispensable to effective implementation. Aside from difficulty of co-ordination with primary care, the intervention was highly workable and easily integrated into practice. Nevertheless, implementation was threatened by under-staffed and under-resourced services, lack of capacity to administer scans and poor patient access. To ensure ongoing service delivery, the contributions of healthcare professionals were shaped by planning, in multi-disciplinary team meetings, the use of clinical databases to identify patients and define the composition of clinical work and monitoring to improve clinical practice.
CONCLUSIONS:
Findings identify and describe elements needed to implement secondary fracture prevention services successfully. The study highlights the value of Normalization Process Theory to achieve comprehensive understanding of healthcare professionals' experiences in enacting a complex intervention.
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Drew, Sarah
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Judge, Andrew
b853f89f-dc44-428e-9fe2-35e925544abe
May, Carl
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Farmer, Andrew
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Cooper, Cyrus
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Javaid, M Kassim
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Gooberman-Hill, Rachael
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23 April 2015
Drew, Sarah
9cfcfe7d-ec22-4de1-a8c5-ef264065cf9c
Judge, Andrew
b853f89f-dc44-428e-9fe2-35e925544abe
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Farmer, Andrew
c384123c-1276-4d06-a2b5-d5419bd83b1d
Cooper, Cyrus
dcc9d567-2d74-410d-84eb-3487f1697f44
Javaid, M Kassim
ae65262a-c2ca-4ad9-ba8c-901fa1726db6
Gooberman-Hill, Rachael
16e90421-29b5-4c76-9204-f6890ebcae0f
Drew, Sarah, Judge, Andrew, May, Carl, Farmer, Andrew, Cooper, Cyrus, Javaid, M Kassim and Gooberman-Hill, Rachael
(2015)
Implementation of secondary fracture prevention services after hip fracture: a qualitative study using extended Normalization Process Theory.
Implementation Science, 10 (1), .
(doi:10.1186/s13012-015-0243-z).
(PMID:25903563)
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
National and international guidance emphasizes the need for hospitals to have effective secondary fracture prevention services, to reduce the risk of future fractures in hip fracture patients. Variation exists in how hospitals organize these services, and there remain significant gaps in care. No research has systematically explored reasons for this to understand how to successfully implement these services. The objective of this study was to use extended Normalization Process Theory to understand how secondary fracture prevention services can be successfully implemented.
METHODS:
Forty-three semi-structured interviews were conducted with healthcare professionals involved in delivering secondary fracture prevention within 11 hospitals that receive patients with acute hip fracture in one region in England. These included orthogeriatricians, fracture prevention nurses and service managers. Extended Normalization Process Theory was used to inform study design and analysis.
RESULTS:
Extended Normalization Process Theory specifies four constructs relating to collective action in service implementation: capacity, potential, capability and contribution. The capacity of healthcare professionals to co-operate and co-ordinate their actions was achieved using dedicated fracture prevention co-ordinators to organize important processes of care. However, participants described effective communication with GPs as challenging. Individual potential and commitment to operationalize services was generally high. Shared commitments were promoted through multi-disciplinary team working, facilitated by fracture prevention co-ordinators. Healthcare professionals had capacity to deliver multiple components of services when co-ordinators 'freed up' time. As key agents in its intervention, fracture prevention coordinators were therefore indispensable to effective implementation. Aside from difficulty of co-ordination with primary care, the intervention was highly workable and easily integrated into practice. Nevertheless, implementation was threatened by under-staffed and under-resourced services, lack of capacity to administer scans and poor patient access. To ensure ongoing service delivery, the contributions of healthcare professionals were shaped by planning, in multi-disciplinary team meetings, the use of clinical databases to identify patients and define the composition of clinical work and monitoring to improve clinical practice.
CONCLUSIONS:
Findings identify and describe elements needed to implement secondary fracture prevention services successfully. The study highlights the value of Normalization Process Theory to achieve comprehensive understanding of healthcare professionals' experiences in enacting a complex intervention.
Text
Implementation of secondary fracture prevention services after hip fracture.pdf
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 April 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 April 2015
Published date: 23 April 2015
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 383943
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/383943
PURE UUID: 03a03320-ef76-495a-b5a0-9e7dda1ba9c0
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Date deposited: 01 Dec 2015 10:30
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 21:50
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Contributors
Author:
Sarah Drew
Author:
Andrew Judge
Author:
Carl May
Author:
Andrew Farmer
Author:
Cyrus Cooper
Author:
M Kassim Javaid
Author:
Rachael Gooberman-Hill
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