Evidence use as sociomaterial practice? A qualitative study of decision-making on introducing service innovations in health care
Simon Turner,Danielle D´Lima,Jessica Sheringham,Nick Swart,Emma Hudson,Stephen Morris,Naomi Fulop +6 more
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TLDR
The authors identify three sociomaterial mechanisms through which evidence and context shape each other in decision-making: connecting, ordering, resisting.Abstract:
A policy aspiration is that evidence should inform decision-making on introducing health service innovations. Internationally, innovation adoption has historically been slow and patchy. Three innov...read more
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The Answer Is 17 Years, What Is the Question
TL;DR: The study concludes that understanding lags first requires agreeing models, definitions and measures, which can be applied in practice, and a second task would be to develop a process by which to gather these data.
From research evidence to ‘evidence by proxy’? Organisational enactment of evidence-based healthcare in four high-income countries.
Roman Kislov,Greta G. Cummings,Anna Ehrenberg,Wendy Gifford,Gillian Harvey,Janet Kelly,Alison Kitson,Lena Pettersson,Lars Wallin,Paul Wilson +9 more
TL;DR: From research evidence to "evidence by proxy" as mentioned in this paper : Organisational enactment of evidence-based healthcare in four high-income countries (US, UK, Ireland, Australia and Canada).
Journal ArticleDOI
"Attending to History" in Major System Change in Healthcare in England: Specialist Cancer Surgery Service Reconfiguration
Catherine Perry,Ruth Boaden,Georgia Black,Caroline S. Clarke,Sarah Darley,Angus I G Ramsay,David C Shackley,Cecilia Vindrola-Padros,Naomi Fulop +8 more
TL;DR: Recognition of, and response to, history, using a range of perspectives, enabled this reconfiguration of specialist oesophago-gastric cancer surgery services, showing how learning from history can be used to enable successful change.
Journal ArticleDOI
The complexities of digitization and street-level discretion: a socio-materiality perspective
TL;DR: In this article , the impact of digitization on street-level discretion can be best understood by examining the affordances and constraints that emerge relationally through the interactions between users (social) and technology (material).
Journal ArticleDOI
Centralisation of specialist cancer surgery services in two areas of England: the RESPECT-21 mixed-methods evaluation
Naomi Fulop,Angus I G Ramsay,Cecilia Vindrola-Padros,Caroline S. Clarke,Rachael Hunter,Georgia Black,Victoria Wood,Mariya Melnychuk,Catherine Perry,Laura Vallejo-Torres,Pei Li Ng,Ravi Barod,Axel Bex,Ruth Boaden,Afsana Bhuiya,Veronica Brinton,Patrick Fay,John Hines,Claire Levermore,Satish B Maddineni,Muntzer Mughal,Kathy Pritchard-Jones,Johan Sandell,David C Shackley,Maxine G. B. Tran,Steve Morris +25 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a mixed-methods approach was used to evaluate the centralisation of specialist cancer surgery for prostate, bladder, renal and oesophago-gastric cancers in two areas of England.
References
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Book
Diffusion of Innovations
TL;DR: A history of diffusion research can be found in this paper, where the authors present a glossary of developments in the field of Diffusion research and discuss the consequences of these developments.
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Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't.
TL;DR: Evidence Based Medicine (IBM) as discussed by the authors is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients, which is a hot topic for clinicians, public health practitioners, purchasers, planners and the public.
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Diffusion of Innovations in Service Organizations: Systematic Review and Recommendations
TL;DR: A parsimonious and evidence-based model for considering the diffusion of innovations in health service organizations, clear knowledge gaps where further research should be focused, and a robust and transferable methodology for systematically reviewing health service policy and management are discussed.
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Achieving Knowledge Translation in Nursing Care: The Need for Greater Rigor in Applying Evidence to Practice
Book
After Method: Mess in Social Science Research
TL;DR: The authors argues that methods are always political and that they are involved in creating the social reality we want to understand and reason about, and they argue that many social reality is vague and ephemeral.