Abstract
<p>Implementation science has traditionally focused on increasing the delivery of evidence-based care. The science of systematically stopping low-value and wasteful care is substantially under-recognized, and if successful, may decrease the workload of clinicians. De-implementation science identifies problem areas of low-value and wasteful practice, carries out rigorous scientific examination of the factors that initiate and maintain such behaviors, and then employs evidence-based interventions to cease these practices. In this commentary, we describe how this approach for de-implementation might require a different set of health systems supports, economic and non-economic levers, and behavior change techniques that can lead to a virtuous cycle, ie, a complex chain of events that positively reinforce themselves through a feedback loop of removing low-value care to make room for high quality care. <em></em></p><p><em>Ethn Dis. </em>2017;27(4):463-468; doi:10.18865/ ed.27.4.463. </p>
Publisher
Ethnicity and Disease Inc
Subject
General Medicine,Epidemiology
Cited by
27 articles.
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