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Hildi Hagedorn

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  86
Citations -  4693

Hildi Hagedorn is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Health care. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 66 publications receiving 3734 citations. Previous affiliations of Hildi Hagedorn include United States Department of Veterans Affairs & Veterans Health Administration.

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An introduction to implementation science for the non-specialist

TL;DR: The authors aim to introduce implementation science principles to non-specialist investigators, administrators, and policymakers seeking to become familiar with this emerging field.

Integration of Mental Health/Substance Abuse and Primary Care

TL;DR: There is a reasonably strong body of evidence to encourage integrated care, at least for depression, and there is no discernible effect of integration level, processes of care, or combination on patient outcomes for mental health services in primary care settings.
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The Role of Formative Evaluation in Implementation Research and the QUERI Experience

TL;DR: The importance and role of 4 stages of formative evaluation in growing understanding of how to implement research findings into practice in order to improve the quality of clinical care is described.
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A Guide for applying a revised version of the PARIHS framework for implementation

TL;DR: Researchers using PARIHS for targeted evidence-based practice (EBP) implementations with a strong task-orientation are invited to use this Guide as a companion and to apply the revised framework prospectively and comprehensively.
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Role of "external facilitation" in implementation of research findings: a qualitative evaluation of facilitation experiences in the Veterans Health Administration

TL;DR: An evaluation of implementation-related facilitation experiences within QUERI provides evidence to suggest that facilitation could be considered a distinct implementation intervention, just as audit and feedback, educational outreach, or similar methods are considered to be discrete interventions.