Abstract
Abstract
Background
Innovative Models Promoting Access to Care Transformation (IMPACT) was a five-year (2013–2018), Canadian-Australian research program that aimed to use a community-based partnership approach to transform primary health care (PHC) organizational structures to improve access to appropriate care for vulnerable populations. Local Innovation Partnerships (LIPs) were developed to support the IMPACT research program, and to be ongoing structures that would continue to drive local improvements to PHC.
Methods
A longitudinal development-focused evaluation explored the overall approach to governance, relationships and processes of the LIPs in the IMPACT program. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with purposively selected participants including researchers with implementation roles and non-researchers who were members of LIPs at four time points: early in the development of the LIPs in 2014; during intervention development in 2015/2016; at the intervention implementation phase in 2017; and nearing completion of the research program in 2018. A hybrid deductive-inductive thematic analysis approach was used. A Guide developed to support the program was used as the framework for designing questions and analysing data using a qualitative descriptive method initially. A visual representation was developed and refined after each round of data collection to illustrate emerging themes around governance, processes and relationship building that were demonstrated by IMPACT LIPs. After all rounds of data collection, an overarching cross-case analysis of narrative summaries of each site was conducted.
Results
Common components of the LIPs identified across all rounds of data collection related to governance structures, stakeholder relationships, collaborative processes, and contextual barriers. LIPs were seen primarily as a structure to support implementation of a research project rather than an ongoing multisectoral community-based partnership. LIPs had relationships with many and varied stakeholders although not necessarily in ways that reflected the intended purpose. Collaboration was valued, but multiple barriers impeded the ability of LIPs to enact real collaboration in daily operations over time. We learned that experience, history, and time matter, especially with respect to community-oriented collaborative skills, structures, and relationships.
Conclusions
This longitudinal multiple case study offers lessons and implications for researchers, funders, and potential stakeholders in community-based participatory research.
Funder
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research
Australian Primary Health Care Research Institute
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference12 articles.
1. Alderwick H, Hutchings A, Briggs A, et al. The impacts of collaboration between local health care and non-health care organizations and factors shaping how they work: a systematic review of reviews. BMC Public Health. 2021;21:753. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10630-1.
2. Bailie R, Matthews V, Brands J, et al. A systems-based partnership learning model for strengthening primary healthcare. Implement Sci. 2013;8:143. https://doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-143.
3. Dozois E, Langlois M, Blanchet-Cohen N. DE 201: A practitioner’s guide to developmental evaluation. In McConnell JW, editor. Family foundation and the international institute for child rights and development; 2010. https://mcconnellfoundation.ca/report/practitioners-guide-developmental-evaluation/.
4. Loban E, Scott C, Lewis V, Haggerty J. Measuring partnership synergy and functioning: multi-stakeholder collaboration in primary health care. PLoS ONE. 2021;16(5): e0252299. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252299.
5. Neergaard MA, Olesen F, Andersen RS, et al. Qualitative description—the poor cousin of health research? BMC Med Res Methodol. 2009;9:52. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2288-9-52.