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A realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency

BACKGROUND: Change agency in its various forms is one intervention aimed at improving the effectiveness of the uptake of evidence. Facilitators, knowledge brokers and opinion leaders are examples of change agency strategies used to promote knowledge utilization. This review adopts a realist approach...

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Autores principales: McCormack, Brendan, Rycroft-Malone, Joanne, DeCorby, Kara, Hutchinson, Alison M, Bucknall, Tracey, Kent, Bridie, Schultz, Alyce, Snelgrove-Clarke, Erna, Stetler, Cheyl, Titler, Marita, Wallin, Lars, Wilson, Valerie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3848622/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24010732
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-107
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author McCormack, Brendan
Rycroft-Malone, Joanne
DeCorby, Kara
Hutchinson, Alison M
Bucknall, Tracey
Kent, Bridie
Schultz, Alyce
Snelgrove-Clarke, Erna
Stetler, Cheyl
Titler, Marita
Wallin, Lars
Wilson, Valerie
author_facet McCormack, Brendan
Rycroft-Malone, Joanne
DeCorby, Kara
Hutchinson, Alison M
Bucknall, Tracey
Kent, Bridie
Schultz, Alyce
Snelgrove-Clarke, Erna
Stetler, Cheyl
Titler, Marita
Wallin, Lars
Wilson, Valerie
author_sort McCormack, Brendan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Change agency in its various forms is one intervention aimed at improving the effectiveness of the uptake of evidence. Facilitators, knowledge brokers and opinion leaders are examples of change agency strategies used to promote knowledge utilization. This review adopts a realist approach and addresses the following question: What change agency characteristics work, for whom do they work, in what circumstances and why? METHODS: The literature reviewed spanned the period 1997-2007. Change agency was operationalized as roles that are aimed at effecting successful change in individuals and organizations. A theoretical framework, developed through stakeholder consultation formed the basis for a search for relevant literature. Team members, working in sub groups, independently themed the data and developed chains of inference to form a series of hypotheses regarding change agency and the role of change agency in knowledge use. RESULTS: 24, 478 electronic references were initially returned from search strategies. Preliminary screening of the article titles reduced the list of potentially relevant papers to 196. A review of full document versions of potentially relevant papers resulted in a final list of 52 papers. The findings add to the knowledge of change agency as they raise issues pertaining to how change agents’ function, how individual change agent characteristics effect evidence-informed health care, the influence of interaction between the change agent and the setting and the overall effect of change agency on knowledge utilization. Particular issues are raised such as how accessibility of the change agent, their cultural compatibility and their attitude mediate overall effectiveness. Findings also indicate the importance of promoting reflection on practice and role modeling. The findings of this study are limited by the complexity and diversity of the change agency literature, poor indexing of literature and a lack of theory-driven approaches. CONCLUSION: This is the first realist review of change agency. Though effectiveness evidence is weak, change agent roles are evolving, as is the literature, which requires more detailed description of interventions, outcomes measures, the context, intensity, and levels at which interventions are implemented in order to understand how change agent interventions effect evidence-informed health care.
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spelling pubmed-38486222013-12-04 A realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency McCormack, Brendan Rycroft-Malone, Joanne DeCorby, Kara Hutchinson, Alison M Bucknall, Tracey Kent, Bridie Schultz, Alyce Snelgrove-Clarke, Erna Stetler, Cheyl Titler, Marita Wallin, Lars Wilson, Valerie Implement Sci Research BACKGROUND: Change agency in its various forms is one intervention aimed at improving the effectiveness of the uptake of evidence. Facilitators, knowledge brokers and opinion leaders are examples of change agency strategies used to promote knowledge utilization. This review adopts a realist approach and addresses the following question: What change agency characteristics work, for whom do they work, in what circumstances and why? METHODS: The literature reviewed spanned the period 1997-2007. Change agency was operationalized as roles that are aimed at effecting successful change in individuals and organizations. A theoretical framework, developed through stakeholder consultation formed the basis for a search for relevant literature. Team members, working in sub groups, independently themed the data and developed chains of inference to form a series of hypotheses regarding change agency and the role of change agency in knowledge use. RESULTS: 24, 478 electronic references were initially returned from search strategies. Preliminary screening of the article titles reduced the list of potentially relevant papers to 196. A review of full document versions of potentially relevant papers resulted in a final list of 52 papers. The findings add to the knowledge of change agency as they raise issues pertaining to how change agents’ function, how individual change agent characteristics effect evidence-informed health care, the influence of interaction between the change agent and the setting and the overall effect of change agency on knowledge utilization. Particular issues are raised such as how accessibility of the change agent, their cultural compatibility and their attitude mediate overall effectiveness. Findings also indicate the importance of promoting reflection on practice and role modeling. The findings of this study are limited by the complexity and diversity of the change agency literature, poor indexing of literature and a lack of theory-driven approaches. CONCLUSION: This is the first realist review of change agency. Though effectiveness evidence is weak, change agent roles are evolving, as is the literature, which requires more detailed description of interventions, outcomes measures, the context, intensity, and levels at which interventions are implemented in order to understand how change agent interventions effect evidence-informed health care. BioMed Central 2013-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3848622/ /pubmed/24010732 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-107 Text en Copyright © 2013 mccormack 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.
spellingShingle Research
McCormack, Brendan
Rycroft-Malone, Joanne
DeCorby, Kara
Hutchinson, Alison M
Bucknall, Tracey
Kent, Bridie
Schultz, Alyce
Snelgrove-Clarke, Erna
Stetler, Cheyl
Titler, Marita
Wallin, Lars
Wilson, Valerie
A realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency
title A realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency
title_full A realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency
title_fullStr A realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency
title_full_unstemmed A realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency
title_short A realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency
title_sort realist review of interventions and strategies to promote evidence-informed healthcare: a focus on change agency
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3848622/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24010732
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-107
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