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Achieving change in primary care—effectiveness of strategies for improving implementation of complex interventions: systematic review of reviews

Achieving change in primary care—effectiveness of strategies for improving implementation of complex interventions: systematic review of reviews
Achieving change in primary care—effectiveness of strategies for improving implementation of complex interventions: systematic review of reviews
Objective: To identify, summarise and synthesise available literature on the effectiveness of implementation strategies for optimising implementation of complex interventions in primary care.

Design: Systematic review of reviews.

Data sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library and PsychINFO were searched, from first publication until December 2013; the bibliographies of relevant articles were screened for additional reports.

Eligibility: criteria for selecting studies Eligible reviews had to (1) examine effectiveness of single or multifaceted implementation strategies, (2) measure health professional practice or process outcomes and (3) include studies from predominantly primary care in developed countries. Two reviewers independently screened titles/abstracts and full-text articles of potentially eligible reviews for inclusion.

Data synthesis: Extracted data were synthesised using a narrative approach.

Results: 91 reviews were included. The most commonly evaluated strategies were those targeted at the level of individual professionals, rather than those targeting organisations or context. These strategies (eg, audit and feedback, educational meetings, educational outreach, reminders) on their own demonstrated a small to modest improvement (2–9%) in professional practice or behaviour with considerable variability in the observed effects. The effects of multifaceted strategies targeted at professionals were mixed and not necessarily more effective than single strategies alone. There was relatively little review evidence on implementation strategies at the levels of organisation and wider context. Evidence on cost-effectiveness was limited and data on costs of different strategies were scarce and/or of low quality.

Conclusions: There is a substantial literature on implementation strategies aimed at changing professional practices or behaviour. It remains unclear which implementation strategies are more likely to be effective than others and under what conditions. Future research should focus on identifying and assessing the effectiveness of strategies targeted at the wider context and organisational levels and examining the costs and cost-effectiveness of implementation strategies.

PROSPERO: registration number CRD42014009410.
1-17
Lau, Rosa
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Stevenson, Fiona
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Ong, Bie Nio
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Dziedzic, Krysia
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Treweek, Shaun
2e309a54-c618-4a59-b0fd-2b878034cb98
Eldridge, Sandra
0df61b1d-95f5-4108-a6a8-91a81afddbe9
Everitt, Hazel
80b9452f-9632-45a8-b017-ceeeee6971ef
Kennedy, Anne
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Qureshi, Nadeem
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Rogers, Anne
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Peacock, Richard
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Murray, Elizabeth
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Lau, Rosa
03fb9ae0-3810-4805-99a8-060a89e1761d
Stevenson, Fiona
881eb2a9-d7a8-449d-be50-ead6fda5cd3e
Ong, Bie Nio
f967326a-f5e0-4571-821e-57f44e726d02
Dziedzic, Krysia
b2fe3d66-6300-4bb8-8a9f-e895fa102603
Treweek, Shaun
2e309a54-c618-4a59-b0fd-2b878034cb98
Eldridge, Sandra
0df61b1d-95f5-4108-a6a8-91a81afddbe9
Everitt, Hazel
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Kennedy, Anne
e059c1c7-d6d0-41c8-95e1-95e5273b07f8
Qureshi, Nadeem
48c1e15a-f152-4532-b657-ed2877dc0b6b
Rogers, Anne
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Peacock, Richard
ddabbfb1-4edb-41ba-95cc-2b9053d9ce1a
Murray, Elizabeth
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Lau, Rosa, Stevenson, Fiona, Ong, Bie Nio, Dziedzic, Krysia, Treweek, Shaun, Eldridge, Sandra, Everitt, Hazel, Kennedy, Anne, Qureshi, Nadeem, Rogers, Anne, Peacock, Richard and Murray, Elizabeth (2015) Achieving change in primary care—effectiveness of strategies for improving implementation of complex interventions: systematic review of reviews. BMJ Open, 5 (12), 1-17, [e009993]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009993). (PMID:26700290)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: To identify, summarise and synthesise available literature on the effectiveness of implementation strategies for optimising implementation of complex interventions in primary care.

Design: Systematic review of reviews.

Data sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library and PsychINFO were searched, from first publication until December 2013; the bibliographies of relevant articles were screened for additional reports.

Eligibility: criteria for selecting studies Eligible reviews had to (1) examine effectiveness of single or multifaceted implementation strategies, (2) measure health professional practice or process outcomes and (3) include studies from predominantly primary care in developed countries. Two reviewers independently screened titles/abstracts and full-text articles of potentially eligible reviews for inclusion.

Data synthesis: Extracted data were synthesised using a narrative approach.

Results: 91 reviews were included. The most commonly evaluated strategies were those targeted at the level of individual professionals, rather than those targeting organisations or context. These strategies (eg, audit and feedback, educational meetings, educational outreach, reminders) on their own demonstrated a small to modest improvement (2–9%) in professional practice or behaviour with considerable variability in the observed effects. The effects of multifaceted strategies targeted at professionals were mixed and not necessarily more effective than single strategies alone. There was relatively little review evidence on implementation strategies at the levels of organisation and wider context. Evidence on cost-effectiveness was limited and data on costs of different strategies were scarce and/or of low quality.

Conclusions: There is a substantial literature on implementation strategies aimed at changing professional practices or behaviour. It remains unclear which implementation strategies are more likely to be effective than others and under what conditions. Future research should focus on identifying and assessing the effectiveness of strategies targeted at the wider context and organisational levels and examining the costs and cost-effectiveness of implementation strategies.

PROSPERO: registration number CRD42014009410.

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Accepted/In Press date: 22 October 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 December 2015
Published date: 23 December 2015
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 388238
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/388238
PURE UUID: 937e6c19-240d-4949-90a0-49d45db46244
ORCID for Hazel Everitt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7362-8403
ORCID for Anne Kennedy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4570-9104

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Date deposited: 22 Feb 2016 16:52
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:04

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Contributors

Author: Rosa Lau
Author: Fiona Stevenson
Author: Bie Nio Ong
Author: Krysia Dziedzic
Author: Shaun Treweek
Author: Sandra Eldridge
Author: Hazel Everitt ORCID iD
Author: Anne Kennedy ORCID iD
Author: Nadeem Qureshi
Author: Anne Rogers
Author: Richard Peacock
Author: Elizabeth Murray

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