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Interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: A realist informed multiple case study evaluation of Engager

BACKGROUND: ‘Engager’ is an innovative ‘through-the-gate’ complex care intervention for male prison-leavers with common mental health problems. In parallel to the randomised-controlled trial of Engager (Trial registration number: ISRCTN11707331), a set of process evaluation analyses were undertaken....

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Autores principales: Weston, Lauren, Rybczynska-Bunt, Sarah, Quinn, Cath, Lennox, Charlotte, Maguire, Mike, Pearson, Mark, Stirzaker, Alex, Durcan, Graham, Stevenson, Caroline, Graham, Jonathan, Carroll, Lauren, Greer, Rebecca, Haddad, Mark, Hunter, Rachael, Anderson, Rob, Todd, Roxanne, Goodier, Sara, Brand, Sarah, Michie, Susan, Kirkpatrick, Tim, Leonard, Sarah, Harris, Tirril, Henley, William, Shaw, Jenny, Owens, Christabel, Byng, Richard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9282559/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35834470
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0270691
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author Weston, Lauren
Rybczynska-Bunt, Sarah
Quinn, Cath
Lennox, Charlotte
Maguire, Mike
Pearson, Mark
Stirzaker, Alex
Durcan, Graham
Stevenson, Caroline
Graham, Jonathan
Carroll, Lauren
Greer, Rebecca
Haddad, Mark
Hunter, Rachael
Anderson, Rob
Todd, Roxanne
Goodier, Sara
Brand, Sarah
Michie, Susan
Kirkpatrick, Tim
Leonard, Sarah
Harris, Tirril
Henley, William
Shaw, Jenny
Owens, Christabel
Byng, Richard
author_facet Weston, Lauren
Rybczynska-Bunt, Sarah
Quinn, Cath
Lennox, Charlotte
Maguire, Mike
Pearson, Mark
Stirzaker, Alex
Durcan, Graham
Stevenson, Caroline
Graham, Jonathan
Carroll, Lauren
Greer, Rebecca
Haddad, Mark
Hunter, Rachael
Anderson, Rob
Todd, Roxanne
Goodier, Sara
Brand, Sarah
Michie, Susan
Kirkpatrick, Tim
Leonard, Sarah
Harris, Tirril
Henley, William
Shaw, Jenny
Owens, Christabel
Byng, Richard
author_sort Weston, Lauren
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: ‘Engager’ is an innovative ‘through-the-gate’ complex care intervention for male prison-leavers with common mental health problems. In parallel to the randomised-controlled trial of Engager (Trial registration number: ISRCTN11707331), a set of process evaluation analyses were undertaken. This paper reports on the depth multiple case study analysis part of the process evaluation, exploring how a sub-sample of prison-leavers engaged and responded to the intervention offer of one-to-one support during their re-integration into the community. METHODS: To understand intervention delivery and what response it elicited in individuals, we used a realist-informed qualitative multiple ‘case’ studies approach. We scrutinised how intervention component delivery lead to outcomes by examining underlying causal pathways or ‘mechanisms’ that promoted or hindered progress towards personal outcomes. ‘Cases’ (n = 24) were prison-leavers from the intervention arm of the trial. We collected practitioner activity logs and conducted semi-structured interviews with prison-leavers and Engager/other service practitioners. We mapped data for each case against the intervention logic model and then used Bhaskar’s (2016) ‘DREIC’ analytic process to categorise cases according to extent of intervention delivery, outcomes evidenced, and contributing factors behind engagement or disengagement and progress achieved. RESULTS: There were variations in the dose and session focus of the intervention delivery, and how different participants responded. Participants sustaining long-term engagement and sustained change reached a state of ‘crises but coping’. We found evidence that several components of the intervention were key to achieving this: trusting relationships, therapeutic work delivered well and over time; and an in-depth shared understanding of needs, concerns, and goals between the practitioner and participants. Those who disengaged were in one of the following states: ‘Crises and chaos’, ‘Resigned acceptance’, ‘Honeymoon’ or ‘Wilful withdrawal’. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that the ‘implementability’ of an intervention can be explained by examining the delivery of core intervention components in relation to the responses elicited in the participants. Core delivery mechanisms often had to be ‘triggered’ numerous times to produce sustained change. The improvements achieved, sustained, and valued by participants were not always reflected in the quantitative measures recorded in the RCT. The compatibility between the practitioner, participant and setting were continually at risk of being undermined by implementation failure as well as changing external circumstances and participants’ own weaknesses. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN11707331, Wales Research Ethics Committee, Registered 02-04-2016—Retrospectively registered https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN11707331.
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spelling pubmed-92825592022-07-15 Interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: A realist informed multiple case study evaluation of Engager Weston, Lauren Rybczynska-Bunt, Sarah Quinn, Cath Lennox, Charlotte Maguire, Mike Pearson, Mark Stirzaker, Alex Durcan, Graham Stevenson, Caroline Graham, Jonathan Carroll, Lauren Greer, Rebecca Haddad, Mark Hunter, Rachael Anderson, Rob Todd, Roxanne Goodier, Sara Brand, Sarah Michie, Susan Kirkpatrick, Tim Leonard, Sarah Harris, Tirril Henley, William Shaw, Jenny Owens, Christabel Byng, Richard PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: ‘Engager’ is an innovative ‘through-the-gate’ complex care intervention for male prison-leavers with common mental health problems. In parallel to the randomised-controlled trial of Engager (Trial registration number: ISRCTN11707331), a set of process evaluation analyses were undertaken. This paper reports on the depth multiple case study analysis part of the process evaluation, exploring how a sub-sample of prison-leavers engaged and responded to the intervention offer of one-to-one support during their re-integration into the community. METHODS: To understand intervention delivery and what response it elicited in individuals, we used a realist-informed qualitative multiple ‘case’ studies approach. We scrutinised how intervention component delivery lead to outcomes by examining underlying causal pathways or ‘mechanisms’ that promoted or hindered progress towards personal outcomes. ‘Cases’ (n = 24) were prison-leavers from the intervention arm of the trial. We collected practitioner activity logs and conducted semi-structured interviews with prison-leavers and Engager/other service practitioners. We mapped data for each case against the intervention logic model and then used Bhaskar’s (2016) ‘DREIC’ analytic process to categorise cases according to extent of intervention delivery, outcomes evidenced, and contributing factors behind engagement or disengagement and progress achieved. RESULTS: There were variations in the dose and session focus of the intervention delivery, and how different participants responded. Participants sustaining long-term engagement and sustained change reached a state of ‘crises but coping’. We found evidence that several components of the intervention were key to achieving this: trusting relationships, therapeutic work delivered well and over time; and an in-depth shared understanding of needs, concerns, and goals between the practitioner and participants. Those who disengaged were in one of the following states: ‘Crises and chaos’, ‘Resigned acceptance’, ‘Honeymoon’ or ‘Wilful withdrawal’. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that the ‘implementability’ of an intervention can be explained by examining the delivery of core intervention components in relation to the responses elicited in the participants. Core delivery mechanisms often had to be ‘triggered’ numerous times to produce sustained change. The improvements achieved, sustained, and valued by participants were not always reflected in the quantitative measures recorded in the RCT. The compatibility between the practitioner, participant and setting were continually at risk of being undermined by implementation failure as well as changing external circumstances and participants’ own weaknesses. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN11707331, Wales Research Ethics Committee, Registered 02-04-2016—Retrospectively registered https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN11707331. Public Library of Science 2022-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9282559/ /pubmed/35834470 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0270691 Text en © 2022 Weston et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Weston, Lauren
Rybczynska-Bunt, Sarah
Quinn, Cath
Lennox, Charlotte
Maguire, Mike
Pearson, Mark
Stirzaker, Alex
Durcan, Graham
Stevenson, Caroline
Graham, Jonathan
Carroll, Lauren
Greer, Rebecca
Haddad, Mark
Hunter, Rachael
Anderson, Rob
Todd, Roxanne
Goodier, Sara
Brand, Sarah
Michie, Susan
Kirkpatrick, Tim
Leonard, Sarah
Harris, Tirril
Henley, William
Shaw, Jenny
Owens, Christabel
Byng, Richard
Interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: A realist informed multiple case study evaluation of Engager
title Interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: A realist informed multiple case study evaluation of Engager
title_full Interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: A realist informed multiple case study evaluation of Engager
title_fullStr Interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: A realist informed multiple case study evaluation of Engager
title_full_unstemmed Interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: A realist informed multiple case study evaluation of Engager
title_short Interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: A realist informed multiple case study evaluation of Engager
title_sort interrogating intervention delivery and participants’ emotional states to improve engagement and implementation: a realist informed multiple case study evaluation of engager
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9282559/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35834470
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0270691
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