Surfacing the causal assumptions and active ingredients of healthcare quality improvement interventions: An application to primary care opioid prescribing

Author:

McCleary Nicola12ORCID,Laur Celia345,Presseau Justin126,Dobell Gail7,Lam Jonathan M.C.7,Gushue Sharon8,Hagel Katie9,Bevan Lindsay9,Salach Lena9,Desveaux Laura4510,M. Ivers Noah3451112

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Implementation Research, Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Canada

2. School of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada

3. Women's College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care (WIHV), Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Canada

4. Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

5. Women's College Research Institute, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Canada

6. School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada

7. Health System Performance & Support, Ontario Health, Toronto, Canada

8. Population Health & Prevention, Ontario Health, Toronto, Canada

9. Centre for Effective Practice, Toronto, Canada

10. Institute for Better Health, Trillium Health Partners, Mississauga, Canada

11. Department of Family and Community Medicine, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Canada

12. Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

Abstract

Background Efforts to maximize the impact of healthcare improvement interventions are hampered when intervention components are not well defined or described, precluding the ability to understand how and why interventions are expected to work. Method We partnered with two organizations delivering province-wide quality improvement interventions to establish how they envisaged their interventions lead to change (their underlying causal assumptions) and to identify active ingredients (behavior change techniques [BCTs]). The interventions assessed were an audit and feedback report and an academic detailing program. Both focused on supporting safer opioid prescribing in primary care in Ontario, Canada. Data collection involved semi-structured interviews with intervention developers ( n = 8) and a content analysis of intervention documents. Analyses unpacked and articulated how the interventions were intended to achieve change and how this was operationalized. Results: Developers anticipated that the feedback report would provide physicians with a clear understanding of their own prescribing patterns in comparison to others. In the feedback report, we found an emphasis on BCTs consistent with that assumption ( feedback on behavior; social comparison). The detailing was designed to provide tailored support to enable physicians to overcome barriers to change and to gradually enact specific practice changes for patients based on improved communication. In the detailing materials, we found an emphasis on instructions on how to perform the behavior, for a range of behaviors (e.g., tapering opioids, treating opioid use disorder). The materials were supplemented by detailer-enacted BCTs (e.g., social support [practical]; goal setting [behavior]; review behavioral goal[s]). Conclusions The interventions included a small range of BCTs addressing various clinical behaviors. This work provides a methodological example of how to apply a behavioral lens to surface the active ingredients, target clinical behaviors, and causal assumptions of existing large-scale improvement interventions that could be applied in other contexts to optimize effectiveness and facilitate scale and spread.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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