126 research outputs found
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Bridging the research to practice gap in transfusion: the need for a multidisciplinary and evidence-based approach
Translating evidence into practice:Behavioural support for smoking cessation.
Background: Evidence-based behaviour change interventions are increasingly implemented in wider clinical practice, such as smoking cessation behavioural support interventions (BSIs) delivered via the English NHS Stop Smoking Services (SSSs). However, the process of translating evidence into practice is complex, slow and often unpredictable. Aims: This thesis investigated factors related to the translation of evidence into practice for smoking cessation BSIs, including: specification and reporting of intervention components, fidelity and quality of delivery, and associations between implementation and outcome. Methods: Six mixed-methods studies were conducted using BSIs delivered by the NHS SSSs as a case study for examining implementation. In Study 1, a taxonomy of smoking cessation behaviour change techniques (BCTs) was applied to specify components comprising effective BSIs for pregnant smokers. Study 2 applied the taxonomy to assess the current standard of published reporting of the content of BSIs. Study 3 assessed the reliability of the taxonomy as a framework for specifying BCTs in transcripts of audio-recorded behavioural support sessions. Studies 4 and 5 applied the taxonomy to assess the extent to which manual-specified BCTs are delivered in practice (i.e. fidelity). Study 6 developed a 10-point scale for rating quality of delivery of a key BCT ‘goal-setting,’ and examined whether quality was associated with smokers’ enactment of planned quit attempts (i.e. outcome). Results: The taxonomy demonstrated consistently high reliability for coding into component BCTs the content of BCIs as described in published reports, trial protocols, service treatment manuals and session transcripts, (Studies 1-5). Using this method, 11 evidence-based BCTs for smoking cessation in pregnancy were specified (Study 1). Published reports of BSIs were inadequate, omitting on average 50% of intervention content originally specified in trial protocols (Study 2). Fidelity was found to be consistently low, with typically less than 50% of manual-specified content being delivered (Studies 4 and 5). It was possible to reliably assess quality of ‘goal-setting,’ which on average was low; however, higher quality of goal-setting significantly increased the likelihood of smokers enacting planned quit attempts (Study 6). Conclusions: Translation of evidence into practice for smoking cessation BSIs is not uniform, with information loss occurring as interventions are disseminated and delivered in practice. The taxonomy provides a reliable methodological approach for examining factors related to implementation. Observed translational issues may inform future training and interventions to improve implementation of BSIs in clinical practice
The Behaviour Change Wheel approach
The Behaviour Change Wheel (BCW) approach is a set of interrelated tools and principles intended to guide decision-making and facilitate systematic development of behavioural interventions. This chapter presents the four behavioural science tools of the BCW and demonstrates how they interlink and can be applied as a system for understanding behaviour and designing behaviour change interventions. Implementing new practices and/or changing existing practices in organizations, services and systems requires changes in individual (for example, health care professional) and collective (for example, clinical team) human behaviour. The implementation research literature contains multiple examples of how the BCW approach has been applied in different ways for different purposes. These include exploring implementation problems, designing and refining implementation interventions, conducting process evaluation of implementation interventions and synthesising implementation research. The authors report on ways in which the various tools have predominantly been used, with accompanying examples to illustrate objectives, methods and high-level outcomes
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Threats to safe transitions from hospital to home: a consensus study in North West London primary care.
BACKGROUND: Transitions between healthcare settings are vulnerable points for patients. AIM: To identify key threats to safe patient transitions from hospital to primary care settings. DESIGN AND SETTING: Three-round web-based Delphi consensus process among clinical and non-clinical staff from 39 primary care practices in North West London, England. METHOD: Round 1 was a free-text idea-generating round. Rounds 2 and 3 were consensus-obtaining rating rounds. Practices were encouraged to complete the questionnaires at team meetings. Aggregate ratings of perceived level of importance for each threat were calculated (1-3: 'not important', 4-6: 'somewhat important', 7-9: 'very important'). Percentage of votes cast for each patient or medication group were recorded; consensus was defined as ≥75%. RESULTS: A total of 39 practices completed round 1, 36/39 (92%) completed round 2, and 30/36 (83%) completed round 3. Round 1 identified nine threats encompassing problems involving communication, service organisation, medication provision, and patients who were most at risk. 'Poor quality of handover instructions from secondary to primary care teams' achieved the highest rating (mean rating at round 3 = 8.43) and a 100% consensus that it was a 'very important' threat. Older individuals (97%) and patients with complex medical problems taking >5 medications (80%) were voted the most vulnerable. Anticoagulants (77%) were considered to pose the greatest risk to patients. CONCLUSION: This study identified specific threats to safe patient transitions from hospital to primary care, providing policymakers and healthcare providers with targets for quality improvement strategies. Further work would need to identify factors underpinning these threats so that interventions can be tailored to the relevant behavioural and environmental contexts in which these threats arise
How Has Intervention Fidelity Been Assessed in Smoking Cessation Interventions? A Systematic Review
Introduction. Intervention fidelity concerns the degree to which interventions are implemented as intended. Fidelity frameworks propose fidelity is a multidimensional concept relevant at intervention designer, provider, and recipient levels; yet the extent to which it is assessed multidimensionally is unclear. Smoking cessation interventions are complex, including multiple components, often delivered over multiple sessions and/or at scale in clinical practice; this increases susceptibility variation in the fidelity with which they are delivered. This review examined the extent to which five dimensions from the Behaviour Change Consortium fidelity framework (design, training, delivery, receipt, and enactment) were assessed in fidelity assessments of smoking cessation interventions (randomised control trials (RCTs)). Methods. Five electronic databases were searched using terms "smoking cessation,""interventions,""fidelity,"and "randomised control trials."Eligible studies included RCTs of smoking cessation behavioural interventions, published post 2006 after publication of the framework, reporting assessment of fidelity. The data extraction form was structured around the framework, which specifies a number of items regarding assessment and reporting of each dimension. Data extraction included study characteristics, dimensions assessed, data collection, and analysis strategies. A score per dimension was calculated, indicating its presence. Results. 55 studies were reviewed. There was a wide variability in data collection approaches used to assess fidelity. Fidelity of delivery was the most commonly assessed and linked to the intervention outcomes (73% of the studies). Fidelity of enactment scored the highest according to the framework (average of 92.7%), and fidelity of training scored the lowest (average of 37.1%). Only a quarter of studies linked fidelity data to outcomes (27%). Conclusion. There is wide variability in methodological and analytical approaches that precludes comparison and synthesis. In order to realise the potential of fidelity investigations to increase scientific confidence in the interpretation of observed trial outcomes, studies should include analyses of the association between fidelity data and outcomes. Findings have highlighted recommendations for improving fidelity evaluations and reporting practices
Barriers and enablers to engagement in participatory arts activities amongst individuals with depression and anxiety: quantitative analyses using a behaviour change framework.
Background There is a large literature on the health benefits of engagement with the arts. However, there are also well-recognised challenges in ensuring equity of engagement with these activities. Specifically, it remains unclear whether individuals with poor mental health experience more barriers to participation. This study used a behaviour change framework to explore barriers to engagement in participatory arts activities amongst people with either depression or anxiety. Methods Data were drawn from a large citizen science experiment focused on participation in creative activities. Participants who reported engaging infrequently in performing arts, visual arts, design and crafts, literature-related activities, and online, digital and electronic arts were included and categorised into no mental health problems (n = 1851), depression but not anxiety (n = 873) and anxiety but not depression (n = 808). Barriers and enablers to engagement were measured using an 18-item scale based on the COM-B Self-Evaluation Questionnaire, with subscales assessing psychological and physical capabilities, social and physical opportunities, and automatic and reflective motivations. Logistic regression analyses were used to identify whether individuals with either depression or anxiety reported greater barriers across any of the six domains than individuals without any mental health problems. Where differences were found, we calculated the percentage of protective association explained by various demographic, socio-economic, social, physical or geographical factors. Results Individuals with depression and anxiety felt they would be more likely to engage in arts activities if they had greater psychological and physical capabilities, more social opportunities, and stronger automatic and reflective motivations to engage. However, they did not feel that more physical opportunities would affect their engagement. Covariates explained only 8–37% of the difference in response amongst those with and without anxiety and depression. Conclusions Findings suggest that for individuals with poor mental health, there are certain barriers to participation that are not felt as strongly by those without any mental health problems. Mapping the behaviour change domains to potential interventions, activities that focus on increasing perceived capabilities, providing social opportunities, and reinforcing both automatic and reflective motivations to engage has the potential to help to redress the imbalance in arts participation amongst those with poor mental health
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Action, actor, context, target, time (AACTT): a framework for specifying behaviour
BACKGROUND: Designing implementation interventions to change the behaviour of healthcare providers and other professionals in the health system requires detailed specification of the behaviour(s) targeted for change to ensure alignment between intervention components and measured outcomes. Detailed behaviour specification can help to clarify evidence-practice gaps, clarify who needs to do what differently, identify modifiable barriers and enablers, design interventions to address these and ultimately provides an indicator of what to measure to evaluate an intervention's effect on behaviour change. An existing behaviour specification framework proposes four domains (Target, Action, Context, Time; TACT), but insufficiently clarifies who is performing the behaviour (i.e. the Actor). Specifying the Actor is especially important in healthcare settings characterised by multiple behaviours performed by multiple different people. We propose and describe an extension and re-ordering of TACT to enhance its utility to implementation intervention designers, practitioners and trialists: the Action, Actor, Context, Target, Time (AACTT) framework. We aim to demonstrate its application across key steps of implementation research and to provide tools for its use in practice to clarify the behaviours of stakeholders across multiple levels of the healthcare system. METHODS AND RESULTS: We used French et al.'s four-step implementation process model to describe the potential applications of the AACTT framework for (a) clarifying who needs to do what differently, (b) identifying barriers and enablers, (c) selecting fit-for-purpose intervention strategies and components and (d) evaluating implementation interventions. CONCLUSIONS: Describing and detailing behaviour using the AACTT framework may help to enhance measurement of theoretical constructs, inform development of topic guides and questionnaires, enhance the design of implementation interventions and clarify outcome measurement for evaluating implementation interventions
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Effective behaviour change techniques in the prevention and management of childhood obesity
Rates of childhood obesity are increasing, and it is essential to identify the active components of interventions aiming to prevent and manage obesity in children. A systematic review of behaviour change interventions was conducted to find evidence of behaviour change techniques (BCTs) that are most effective in changing physical activity and/or eating behaviour for the prevention or management of childhood obesity. An electronic search was conducted for randomised controlled trials published between January 1990 and December 2009. Of 4309 titles and abstracts screened, full texts of 135 articles were assessed, of which 17 published articles were included in this review. Intervention descriptions were coded according to the behaviour-specific CALO-RE taxonomy of BCTs. BCTs were identified and compared across obesity management (n=9) vs prevention (n=8) trials. To assess the effectiveness of individual BCTs, trials were further divided into those that were effective (defined as either a group reduction of at least 0.13 body mass index (BMI) units or a significant difference in BMI between intervention and control groups at follow-up) vs non-effective (reported no significant differences between groups). We reliably identified BCTs utilised in effective and non-effective prevention and management trials. To illustrate the relative effectiveness of each BCT, effectiveness ratios were calculated as the ratio of the number of times each BCT was a component of an intervention in an effective trial divided by the number of times they were a component of all trials. Results indicated six BCTs that may be effective components of future management interventions (provide information on the consequences of behaviour to the individual, environmental restructuring, prompt practice, prompt identification as role model/position advocate, stress management/emotional control training and general communication skills training), and one that may be effective in prevention interventions (prompting generalisation of a target behaviour). We identified that for management trials, providing information on the consequences of behaviour in general was a feature of non-effective interventions and for prevention trials, providing information on the consequences of behaviour in general, providing rewards contingent on successful behaviour and facilitating social comparison were non-effective. To design effective behaviour change programmes for the prevention and management of childhood obesity, we would recommend utilising the BCTs identified as effective in this review. The impact on intervention effectiveness of combining BCTs should be the topic of further research
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A method for assessing fidelity of delivery of telephone behavioral support for smoking cessation
Objectives: Behavioral support for smoking cessation is delivered through different modalities, often guided by treatment manuals. Recently developed methods for assessing fidelity of delivery have shown that face-to-face behavioral support is often not delivered as specified in the service treatment manual. This study aimed to extend this method to evaluate fidelity of telephone-delivered behavioral support.
Method: A treatment manual and transcripts of 75 audio-recorded behavioral support sessions were obtained from the United Kingdom's national Quitline service and coded into component behavior change techniques (BCTs) using a taxonomy of 45 smoking cessation BCTs. Interrater reliability was assessed using percentage agreement. Fidelity was assessed by comparing the number of BCTs identified in the manual with those delivered in telephone sessions by 4 counselors. Fidelity was assessed according to session type, duration, counselor, and BCT. Differences between self-reported and actual BCT use were examined.
Results: Average coding reliability was high (81%). On average, 41.8% of manual-specified BCTs were delivered per session (SD = 16.2), with fidelity varying by counselor from 32% to 49%. Fidelity was highest in pre-quit sessions (46%) and for BCT "give options for additional support" (95%). Fidelity was lowest for quit-day sessions (35%) and BCT "set graded tasks" (0%). Session duration was positively correlated with fidelity (r = .585; p < .01). Significantly fewer BCTs were used than were reported as being used, t(15) = -5.52, p < .001.
Conclusions: The content of telephone-delivered behavioral support can be reliably coded in terms of BCTs. This can be used to assess fidelity to treatment manuals and to in turn identify training needs. The observed low fidelity underlines the need to establish routine procedures for monitoring delivery of behavioral support. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved)
Influences on single-use and reusable cup use: a multidisciplinary mixed-methods approach to designing interventions reducing plastic waste
An estimated 2.5–5 billion single-use coffee cups are disposed of annually in the UK, most of which
consist of paper with a plastic lining. Due to the difficulty of recycling poly-coated material, most
of these cups end up incinerated or put in landfills. As drinking (take-away) hot beverages is a
behaviour, behaviour change interventions are necessary to reduce the environmental impacts of
single-use coffee cup waste. Basing the design of interventions on a theoretical understanding of
behaviour increases the transparency of the development process, the likelihood that the desired
changes in behaviour will occur and the potential to synthesise findings across studies. The present
paper presents a methodology for identifying influences on using single-use and reusable cups as
a basis for designing intervention strategies. Two behaviour change frameworks: The Theoretical
Domains Framework (TDF) and the Capability-Opportunity-Motivation-Behaviour (COMB) model
of behaviour, were used to develop an online survey and follow-up interviews. Research findings
can inform the selection of intervention strategies using a third framework, the Behaviour Change
Wheel (BCW). The application of the methodology is illustrated in relation to understanding
barriers and enablers to single-use and reusable cup use across the setting of a London university
campus. We have developed a detailed method for identifying behavioural influences relevant
to pro-environmental behaviours, together with practical guidance for each step and a worked
example. Benefits of this work include it providing guidance on developing study materials and collecting and analysing data. We offer this methodology to the intervention development and
implementation community to assist in the application of behaviour change theory to interventions
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