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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Promoting professional behaviour change in healthcare: what interventions work, and why? A theory-led overview of systematic reviews

TLDR
This theory-led analysis suggests that interventions which contribute to normative restructuring of practice, modifying peer group norms and expectations and relational restructuring, reinforcing modifiedpeer group norms by emphasising the expectations of an external reference group offer the best chances of success.
Abstract
Objectives Translating research evidence into routine clinical practice is notoriously difficult. Behavioural interventions are often used to change practice, although their success is variable and the characteristics of more successful interventions are unclear. We aimed to establish the characteristics of successful behaviour change interventions in healthcare. Design We carried out a systematic overview of systematic reviews on the effectiveness of behaviour change interventions with a theory-led analysis using the constructs of normalisation process theory (NPT). MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsychINFO and the Cochrane Library were searched electronically from inception to July 2015. Setting Primary and secondary care. Participants Participants were any patients and healthcare professionals in systematic reviews who met the inclusion criteria of having examined the effectiveness of professional interventions in improving professional practice and/or patient outcomes. Interventions Professional interventions as defined by the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care Review Group. Primary and secondary outcome measures Success of each intervention in changing practice or patient outcomes, and their mechanisms of action. Reviews were coded as to the interventions included, how successful they had been and which NPT constructs its component interventions covered. Results Searches identified 4724 articles, 67 of which met the inclusion criteria. Interventions fell into three main categories: persuasive; educational and informational; and action and monitoring. Interventions focusing on action or education (eg, Audit and Feedback, Reminders, Educational Outreach) acted on the NPT constructs of Collective Action and Reflexive Monitoring, and reviews using them tended to report more positive outcomes. Conclusions This theory-led analysis suggests that interventions which contribute to normative restructuring of practice, modifying peer group norms and expectations (eg, educational outreach) and relational restructuring, reinforcing modified peer group norms by emphasising the expectations of an external reference group (eg, Reminders, Audit and Feedback), offer the best chances of success. Combining such interventions is most likely to change behaviour.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Controlled Interventions to Reduce Burnout in Physicians A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

TL;DR: Evidence from this meta-analysis suggests that recent intervention programs for burnout in physicians were associated with small benefits that may be boosted by adoption of organization-directed approaches, providing support for the view that burnout is a problem of the whole health care organization, rather than individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implementation, context and complexity.

TL;DR: An ecological model of the ways that participants in implementation and health improvement processes interact with contexts is presented and it is shown how these processes involve interactions between mechanisms of resource mobilisation, collective action and negotiations with context that contribute to self-organisation in complex adaptive systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using Normalization Process Theory in feasibility studies and process evaluations of complex healthcare interventions: a systematic review

TL;DR: NPT appears to provide researchers and practitioners with a conceptual vocabulary for rigorous studies of implementation processes, which means that analyses using NPT can effectively assist in the explanation of the success or failure of specific implementation projects.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The theory of planned behavior

TL;DR: Ajzen, 1985, 1987, this article reviewed the theory of planned behavior and some unresolved issues and concluded that the theory is well supported by empirical evidence and that intention to perform behaviors of different kinds can be predicted with high accuracy from attitudes toward the behavior, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control; and these intentions, together with perceptions of behavioral control, account for considerable variance in actual behavior.
Book

Interpreting Qualitative Data : Methods for Analysing Talk, Text and Interaction

TL;DR: This book has been substantially rewritten with the aim of greater clarity and a considerably expanded treatment of discourse analysis are provided in the new edition as discussed by the authors, which takes account of the growing interest in qualitative research outside sociology and anthropology from psychology to information systems, health promotion, management and many other disciplines.
Book ChapterDOI

Qualitative data analysis for applied policy research

Jane Ritchie, +1 more
TL;DR: The last two decades have seen a notable growth in the use of qualitative methods for applied social policy research as discussed by the authors, which is underpinned by the persistent requirement in social policy fields to understand complex behaviours, needs, systems and cultures.
Journal ArticleDOI

The behaviour change wheel: a new method for characterising and designing behaviour change interventions.

TL;DR: Interventions and policies to change behaviour can be usefully characterised by means of a BCW comprising: a 'behaviour system' at the hub, encircled by intervention functions and then by policy categories, and a new framework aimed at overcoming their limitations is developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Audit and feedback: effects on professional practice and healthcare outcomes

TL;DR: The results indicated that feedback may be more effective when baseline performance is low, the source is a supervisor or colleague, it is provided more than once, and the role of context and the targeted clinical behaviour was assessed.
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