Many medical interventions—particularly non-pharmacological
ones—are complex, consisting of multiple interacting
components targeted at different organisational levels.1 2
Published descriptions of complex interventions often do not
contain enough detail to enable their replication.2-5 Reports of
behaviour change interventions should include descriptions of
setting, mode, intensity, and duration, and characteristics of the
participants.6 Graphical methods, such as that showing the
relative timing of assessments and intervention components,7
may improve clarity of reporting. However, these approaches
do not reveal the connections between the different “actors” in
a complex intervention.8 Different audiences may want different
things from a description of an intervention, but visualising
relationships between actors can clarify crucial features such
as the fidelity with which the intervention is passed down a
chain of actors
and possible routes of contamination between
treatment arms. Here we describe a new graphical approach—the
cascade diagram—that highlights these potential problems