Cargando…

Organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the HTN-IMPROVE study

BACKGROUND: Hypertension is prevalent and often sub-optimally controlled; however, interventions to improve blood pressure control have had limited success. OBJECTIVES: Through implementation of an evidence-based nurse-delivered self-management phone intervention to facilitate hypertension managemen...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shaw, Ryan J, Kaufman, Miriam A, Bosworth, Hayden B, Weiner, Bryan J, Zullig, Leah L, Lee, Shoou-Yih Daniel, Kravetz, Jeffrey D, Rakley, Susan M, Roumie, Christianne L, Bowen, Michael E, Del Monte, Pamela S, Oddone, Eugene Z, Jackson, George L
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3847033/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24010683
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-106
_version_ 1782293523834339328
author Shaw, Ryan J
Kaufman, Miriam A
Bosworth, Hayden B
Weiner, Bryan J
Zullig, Leah L
Lee, Shoou-Yih Daniel
Kravetz, Jeffrey D
Rakley, Susan M
Roumie, Christianne L
Bowen, Michael E
Del Monte, Pamela S
Oddone, Eugene Z
Jackson, George L
author_facet Shaw, Ryan J
Kaufman, Miriam A
Bosworth, Hayden B
Weiner, Bryan J
Zullig, Leah L
Lee, Shoou-Yih Daniel
Kravetz, Jeffrey D
Rakley, Susan M
Roumie, Christianne L
Bowen, Michael E
Del Monte, Pamela S
Oddone, Eugene Z
Jackson, George L
author_sort Shaw, Ryan J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Hypertension is prevalent and often sub-optimally controlled; however, interventions to improve blood pressure control have had limited success. OBJECTIVES: Through implementation of an evidence-based nurse-delivered self-management phone intervention to facilitate hypertension management within large complex health systems, we sought to answer the following questions: What is the level of organizational readiness to implement the intervention? What are the specific facilitators, barriers, and contextual factors that may affect organizational readiness to change? STUDY DESIGN: Each intervention site from three separate Veterans Integrated Service Networks (VISNs), which represent 21 geographic regions across the US, agreed to enroll 500 participants over a year with at least 0.5 full time equivalent employees of nursing time. Our mixed methods approach used a priori semi-structured interviews conducted with stakeholders (n = 27) including nurses, physicians, administrators, and information technology (IT) professionals between 2010 and 2011. Researchers iteratively identified facilitators and barriers of organizational readiness to change (ORC) and implementation. Additionally, an ORC survey was conducted with the stakeholders who were (n = 102) preparing for program implementation. RESULTS: Key ORC facilitators included stakeholder buy-in and improving hypertension. Positive organizational characteristics likely to impact ORC included: other similar programs that support buy-in, adequate staff, and alignment with the existing site environment; improved patient outcomes; is positive for the professional nurse role, and is evidence-based; understanding of the intervention; IT infrastructure and support, and utilization of existing equipment and space. The primary ORC barrier was unclear long-term commitment of nursing. Negative organizational characteristics likely to impact ORC included: added workload, competition with existing programs, implementation length, and limited available nurse staff time; buy-in is temporary until evidence shows improved outcomes; contacting patients and the logistics of integration into existing workflow is a challenge; and inadequate staffing is problematic. Findings were complementary across quantitative and qualitative analyses. CONCLUSIONS: The model of organizational change identified key facilitators and barriers of organizational readiness to change and successful implementation. This study allows us to understand the needs and challenges of intervention implementation. Furthermore, examination of organizational facilitators and barriers to implementation of evidence-based interventions may inform dissemination in other chronic diseases.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3847033
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-38470332013-12-04 Organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the HTN-IMPROVE study Shaw, Ryan J Kaufman, Miriam A Bosworth, Hayden B Weiner, Bryan J Zullig, Leah L Lee, Shoou-Yih Daniel Kravetz, Jeffrey D Rakley, Susan M Roumie, Christianne L Bowen, Michael E Del Monte, Pamela S Oddone, Eugene Z Jackson, George L Implement Sci Research BACKGROUND: Hypertension is prevalent and often sub-optimally controlled; however, interventions to improve blood pressure control have had limited success. OBJECTIVES: Through implementation of an evidence-based nurse-delivered self-management phone intervention to facilitate hypertension management within large complex health systems, we sought to answer the following questions: What is the level of organizational readiness to implement the intervention? What are the specific facilitators, barriers, and contextual factors that may affect organizational readiness to change? STUDY DESIGN: Each intervention site from three separate Veterans Integrated Service Networks (VISNs), which represent 21 geographic regions across the US, agreed to enroll 500 participants over a year with at least 0.5 full time equivalent employees of nursing time. Our mixed methods approach used a priori semi-structured interviews conducted with stakeholders (n = 27) including nurses, physicians, administrators, and information technology (IT) professionals between 2010 and 2011. Researchers iteratively identified facilitators and barriers of organizational readiness to change (ORC) and implementation. Additionally, an ORC survey was conducted with the stakeholders who were (n = 102) preparing for program implementation. RESULTS: Key ORC facilitators included stakeholder buy-in and improving hypertension. Positive organizational characteristics likely to impact ORC included: other similar programs that support buy-in, adequate staff, and alignment with the existing site environment; improved patient outcomes; is positive for the professional nurse role, and is evidence-based; understanding of the intervention; IT infrastructure and support, and utilization of existing equipment and space. The primary ORC barrier was unclear long-term commitment of nursing. Negative organizational characteristics likely to impact ORC included: added workload, competition with existing programs, implementation length, and limited available nurse staff time; buy-in is temporary until evidence shows improved outcomes; contacting patients and the logistics of integration into existing workflow is a challenge; and inadequate staffing is problematic. Findings were complementary across quantitative and qualitative analyses. CONCLUSIONS: The model of organizational change identified key facilitators and barriers of organizational readiness to change and successful implementation. This study allows us to understand the needs and challenges of intervention implementation. Furthermore, examination of organizational facilitators and barriers to implementation of evidence-based interventions may inform dissemination in other chronic diseases. BioMed Central 2013-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3847033/ /pubmed/24010683 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-106 Text en Copyright © 2013 Shaw et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Shaw, Ryan J
Kaufman, Miriam A
Bosworth, Hayden B
Weiner, Bryan J
Zullig, Leah L
Lee, Shoou-Yih Daniel
Kravetz, Jeffrey D
Rakley, Susan M
Roumie, Christianne L
Bowen, Michael E
Del Monte, Pamela S
Oddone, Eugene Z
Jackson, George L
Organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the HTN-IMPROVE study
title Organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the HTN-IMPROVE study
title_full Organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the HTN-IMPROVE study
title_fullStr Organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the HTN-IMPROVE study
title_full_unstemmed Organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the HTN-IMPROVE study
title_short Organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the HTN-IMPROVE study
title_sort organizational factors associated with readiness to implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to improve blood pressure control: the htn-improve study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3847033/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24010683
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-106
work_keys_str_mv AT shawryanj organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT kaufmanmiriama organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT bosworthhaydenb organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT weinerbryanj organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT zulligleahl organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT leeshoouyihdaniel organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT kravetzjeffreyd organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT rakleysusanm organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT roumiechristiannel organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT bowenmichaele organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT delmontepamelas organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT oddoneeugenez organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy
AT jacksongeorgel organizationalfactorsassociatedwithreadinesstoimplementandtranslateaprimarycarebasedtelemedicinebehavioralprogramtoimprovebloodpressurecontrolthehtnimprovestudy