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Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of implementation strategy
BACKGROUND: Initial results from the SCALA study demonstrated that training primary health care providers is an effective implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening in Colombia, Mexico and Peru, but did not show evidence of superior performance for the standard compared to the shorter tra...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
SAGE Publications
2022
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9924276/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37091075 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/26334895221112693 |
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author | Kokole, Daša Jané-Llopis, Eva Natera Rey, Guillermina Aguilar, Natalia Bautista Medina Aguilar, Perla Sonia Mejía-Trujillo, Juliana Mora, Katherine Restrepo, Natalia Bustamante, Ines Piazza, Marina O’Donnell, Amy Solovei, Adriana Mercken, Liesbeth Schmidt, Christiane Sybille Lopez-Pelayo, Hugo Matrai, Silvia Braddick, Fleur Gual, Antoni Rehm, Jürgen Anderson, Peter de Vries, Hein |
author_facet | Kokole, Daša Jané-Llopis, Eva Natera Rey, Guillermina Aguilar, Natalia Bautista Medina Aguilar, Perla Sonia Mejía-Trujillo, Juliana Mora, Katherine Restrepo, Natalia Bustamante, Ines Piazza, Marina O’Donnell, Amy Solovei, Adriana Mercken, Liesbeth Schmidt, Christiane Sybille Lopez-Pelayo, Hugo Matrai, Silvia Braddick, Fleur Gual, Antoni Rehm, Jürgen Anderson, Peter de Vries, Hein |
author_sort | Kokole, Daša |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Initial results from the SCALA study demonstrated that training primary health care providers is an effective implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening in Colombia, Mexico and Peru, but did not show evidence of superior performance for the standard compared to the shorter training arm. This paper elaborates on those outcomes by examining the relationship of training-related process evaluation indicators with the alcohol screening practice. METHODS: A mix of convergent and exploratory mixed-methods design was employed. Data sources included training documentation, post-training questionnaires, observation forms, self-report forms and interviews. Available quantitative data were compared on outcome measure – providers’ alcohol screening. RESULTS: Training reach was high: three hundred fifty-two providers (72.3% of all eligible) participated in one or more training or booster sessions. Country differences in session length reflected adaptation to previous topic knowledge and experience of the providers. Overall, 49% of attendees conducted alcohol screening in practice. A higher dose received was positively associated with screening, but there was no difference between standard and short training arms. Although the training sessions were well received by participants, satisfaction with training and perceived utility for practice were not associated with screening. Profession, but not age or gender, was associated with screening: in Colombia and Mexico, doctors and psychologists were more likely to screen (although the latter represented only a small proportion of the sample) and in Peru, only psychologists. CONCLUSIONS: The SCALA training programme was well received by the participants and led to half of the participating providers conducting alcohol screening in their primary health care practice. The dose received and the professional role were the key factors associated with conducting the alcohol screening in practice. Plain Language Summary: Primary health care providers can play an important role in detecting heavy drinkers among their consulting patients, and training can be an effective implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening and detection. Existing training literature predominantly focuses on evaluating trainings in high-income countries, or evaluating their effectiveness rather than implementation. As part of SCALA (Scale-up of Prevention and Management of Alcohol Use Disorders in Latin America) study, we evaluated training as implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening in primary health care in a middle-income context. Overall, 72.3% of eligible providers attended the training and 49% of training attendees conducted alcohol screening in practice after attending the training. Our process evaluation suggests that simple intervention with sufficient time to practice, adapted to limited provider availability, is optimal to balance training feasibility and effectiveness; that booster sessions are especially important in context with lower organizational or structural support; and that ongoing training refinement during the implementation period is necessary. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-9924276 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2022 |
publisher | SAGE Publications |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-99242762023-04-20 Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of implementation strategy Kokole, Daša Jané-Llopis, Eva Natera Rey, Guillermina Aguilar, Natalia Bautista Medina Aguilar, Perla Sonia Mejía-Trujillo, Juliana Mora, Katherine Restrepo, Natalia Bustamante, Ines Piazza, Marina O’Donnell, Amy Solovei, Adriana Mercken, Liesbeth Schmidt, Christiane Sybille Lopez-Pelayo, Hugo Matrai, Silvia Braddick, Fleur Gual, Antoni Rehm, Jürgen Anderson, Peter de Vries, Hein Implement Res Pract Original Empirical Research BACKGROUND: Initial results from the SCALA study demonstrated that training primary health care providers is an effective implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening in Colombia, Mexico and Peru, but did not show evidence of superior performance for the standard compared to the shorter training arm. This paper elaborates on those outcomes by examining the relationship of training-related process evaluation indicators with the alcohol screening practice. METHODS: A mix of convergent and exploratory mixed-methods design was employed. Data sources included training documentation, post-training questionnaires, observation forms, self-report forms and interviews. Available quantitative data were compared on outcome measure – providers’ alcohol screening. RESULTS: Training reach was high: three hundred fifty-two providers (72.3% of all eligible) participated in one or more training or booster sessions. Country differences in session length reflected adaptation to previous topic knowledge and experience of the providers. Overall, 49% of attendees conducted alcohol screening in practice. A higher dose received was positively associated with screening, but there was no difference between standard and short training arms. Although the training sessions were well received by participants, satisfaction with training and perceived utility for practice were not associated with screening. Profession, but not age or gender, was associated with screening: in Colombia and Mexico, doctors and psychologists were more likely to screen (although the latter represented only a small proportion of the sample) and in Peru, only psychologists. CONCLUSIONS: The SCALA training programme was well received by the participants and led to half of the participating providers conducting alcohol screening in their primary health care practice. The dose received and the professional role were the key factors associated with conducting the alcohol screening in practice. Plain Language Summary: Primary health care providers can play an important role in detecting heavy drinkers among their consulting patients, and training can be an effective implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening and detection. Existing training literature predominantly focuses on evaluating trainings in high-income countries, or evaluating their effectiveness rather than implementation. As part of SCALA (Scale-up of Prevention and Management of Alcohol Use Disorders in Latin America) study, we evaluated training as implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening in primary health care in a middle-income context. Overall, 72.3% of eligible providers attended the training and 49% of training attendees conducted alcohol screening in practice after attending the training. Our process evaluation suggests that simple intervention with sufficient time to practice, adapted to limited provider availability, is optimal to balance training feasibility and effectiveness; that booster sessions are especially important in context with lower organizational or structural support; and that ongoing training refinement during the implementation period is necessary. SAGE Publications 2022-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9924276/ /pubmed/37091075 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/26334895221112693 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage). |
spellingShingle | Original Empirical Research Kokole, Daša Jané-Llopis, Eva Natera Rey, Guillermina Aguilar, Natalia Bautista Medina Aguilar, Perla Sonia Mejía-Trujillo, Juliana Mora, Katherine Restrepo, Natalia Bustamante, Ines Piazza, Marina O’Donnell, Amy Solovei, Adriana Mercken, Liesbeth Schmidt, Christiane Sybille Lopez-Pelayo, Hugo Matrai, Silvia Braddick, Fleur Gual, Antoni Rehm, Jürgen Anderson, Peter de Vries, Hein Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of implementation strategy |
title | Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru
to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of
implementation strategy |
title_full | Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru
to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of
implementation strategy |
title_fullStr | Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru
to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of
implementation strategy |
title_full_unstemmed | Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru
to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of
implementation strategy |
title_short | Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru
to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of
implementation strategy |
title_sort | training primary health care providers in colombia, mexico and peru
to increase alcohol screening: mixed-methods process evaluation of
implementation strategy |
topic | Original Empirical Research |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9924276/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37091075 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/26334895221112693 |
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