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A systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: Summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence

BACKGROUND: Measurement is a critical component for any field. Systematic reviews are a way to locate measures and uncover gaps in current measurement practices. The present study identified measures used in behavioral health settings that assessed all constructs within the Process domain and two co...

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Autores principales: Dorsey, Caitlin N, Mettert, Kayne D, Puspitasari, Ajeng J, Damschroder, Laura J, Lewis, Cara C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9978628/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37089997
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/26334895211002474
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author Dorsey, Caitlin N
Mettert, Kayne D
Puspitasari, Ajeng J
Damschroder, Laura J
Lewis, Cara C
author_facet Dorsey, Caitlin N
Mettert, Kayne D
Puspitasari, Ajeng J
Damschroder, Laura J
Lewis, Cara C
author_sort Dorsey, Caitlin N
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Measurement is a critical component for any field. Systematic reviews are a way to locate measures and uncover gaps in current measurement practices. The present study identified measures used in behavioral health settings that assessed all constructs within the Process domain and two constructs from the Inner setting domain as defined by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). While previous conceptual work has established the importance social networks and key stakeholders play throughout the implementation process, measurement studies have not focused on investigating the quality of how these activities are being carried out. METHODS: The review occurred in three phases: Phase I, data collection included (1) search string generation, (2) title and abstract screening, (3) full text review, (4) mapping to CFIR-constructs, and (5) “cited-by” searches. Phase II, data extraction, consisted of coding information relevant to the nine psychometric properties included in the Psychometric And Pragmatic Rating Scale (PAPERS). In Phase III, data analysis was completed. RESULTS: Measures were identified in only seven constructs: Structural characteristics (n = 13), Networks and communication (n = 29), Engaging (n = 1), Opinion leaders (n = 5), Champions (n = 5), Planning (n = 5), and Reflecting and evaluating (n = 5). No quantitative assessment measures of Formally appointed implementation leaders, External change agents, or Executing were identified. Internal consistency and norms were reported on most often, whereas no studies reported on discriminant validity or responsiveness. Not one measure in the sample reported all nine psychometric properties evaluated by the PAPERS. Scores in the identified sample of measures ranged from “-2” to “10” out of a total of “36.” CONCLUSIONS: Overall measures demonstrated minimal to adequate evidence and available psychometric information was limited. The majority were study specific, limiting their generalizability. Future work should focus on more rigorous measure development and testing of currently existing measures, while moving away from creating new, single use measures. PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: How we measure the processes and players involved for implementing evidence-based interventions is crucial to understanding what factors are helping or hurting the intervention’s use in practice and how to take the intervention to scale. Unfortunately, measures of these factors—stakeholders, their networks and communication, and their implementation activities—have received little attention. This study sought to identify and evaluate the quality of these types of measures. Our review focused on collecting measures used for identifying influential staff members, known as opinion leaders and champions, and investigating how they plan, execute, engage, and evaluate the hard work of implementation. Upon identifying these measures, we collected all published information about their uses to evaluate the quality of their evidence with respect to their ability to produce consistent results across items within each use (i.e., reliable) and if they assess what they are intending to measure (i.e., valid). Our searches located over 40 measures deployed in behavioral health settings for evaluation. We observed a dearth of evidence for reliability and validity and when evidence existed the quality was low. These findings tell us that more measurement work is needed to better understand how to optimize players and processes for the purposes of successful implementation.
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spelling pubmed-99786282023-04-20 A systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: Summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence Dorsey, Caitlin N Mettert, Kayne D Puspitasari, Ajeng J Damschroder, Laura J Lewis, Cara C Implement Res Pract Review BACKGROUND: Measurement is a critical component for any field. Systematic reviews are a way to locate measures and uncover gaps in current measurement practices. The present study identified measures used in behavioral health settings that assessed all constructs within the Process domain and two constructs from the Inner setting domain as defined by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). While previous conceptual work has established the importance social networks and key stakeholders play throughout the implementation process, measurement studies have not focused on investigating the quality of how these activities are being carried out. METHODS: The review occurred in three phases: Phase I, data collection included (1) search string generation, (2) title and abstract screening, (3) full text review, (4) mapping to CFIR-constructs, and (5) “cited-by” searches. Phase II, data extraction, consisted of coding information relevant to the nine psychometric properties included in the Psychometric And Pragmatic Rating Scale (PAPERS). In Phase III, data analysis was completed. RESULTS: Measures were identified in only seven constructs: Structural characteristics (n = 13), Networks and communication (n = 29), Engaging (n = 1), Opinion leaders (n = 5), Champions (n = 5), Planning (n = 5), and Reflecting and evaluating (n = 5). No quantitative assessment measures of Formally appointed implementation leaders, External change agents, or Executing were identified. Internal consistency and norms were reported on most often, whereas no studies reported on discriminant validity or responsiveness. Not one measure in the sample reported all nine psychometric properties evaluated by the PAPERS. Scores in the identified sample of measures ranged from “-2” to “10” out of a total of “36.” CONCLUSIONS: Overall measures demonstrated minimal to adequate evidence and available psychometric information was limited. The majority were study specific, limiting their generalizability. Future work should focus on more rigorous measure development and testing of currently existing measures, while moving away from creating new, single use measures. PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: How we measure the processes and players involved for implementing evidence-based interventions is crucial to understanding what factors are helping or hurting the intervention’s use in practice and how to take the intervention to scale. Unfortunately, measures of these factors—stakeholders, their networks and communication, and their implementation activities—have received little attention. This study sought to identify and evaluate the quality of these types of measures. Our review focused on collecting measures used for identifying influential staff members, known as opinion leaders and champions, and investigating how they plan, execute, engage, and evaluate the hard work of implementation. Upon identifying these measures, we collected all published information about their uses to evaluate the quality of their evidence with respect to their ability to produce consistent results across items within each use (i.e., reliable) and if they assess what they are intending to measure (i.e., valid). Our searches located over 40 measures deployed in behavioral health settings for evaluation. We observed a dearth of evidence for reliability and validity and when evidence existed the quality was low. These findings tell us that more measurement work is needed to better understand how to optimize players and processes for the purposes of successful implementation. SAGE Publications 2021-04-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9978628/ /pubmed/37089997 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/26334895211002474 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Review
Dorsey, Caitlin N
Mettert, Kayne D
Puspitasari, Ajeng J
Damschroder, Laura J
Lewis, Cara C
A systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: Summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence
title A systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: Summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence
title_full A systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: Summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence
title_fullStr A systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: Summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence
title_full_unstemmed A systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: Summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence
title_short A systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: Summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence
title_sort systematic review of measures of implementation players and processes: summarizing the dearth of psychometric evidence
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9978628/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37089997
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/26334895211002474
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