Understanding decisions to scale up: a qualitative case study of three health service intervention evaluations

Author:

Rotteau Leahora1ORCID,Albert Mathieu23,Bhattacharyya Onil456,Berta Whitney7,Webster Fiona8

Affiliation:

1. PhD Candidate, Institute for Healthcare Policy, Measurement and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Canada

2. Scientist, The Wilson Centre, University of Toronto, Canada

3. Associate Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Canada

4. Frigon-Blau Chair in Family Medicine Research, Women's College Hospital, Canada

5. Associate Professor and Clinician Scientist, Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto, Canada

6. Associate Professor, Institute for Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Canada

7. Professor, Institute for Healthcare Policy, Measurement and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Canada

8. Associate Professor, Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing, University of Western Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Objective Efforts to scale up evidence-based health care interventions are seen as a key strategy to address complex health system challenges. However, scale-up efforts have shown significant variability. We address the gap between scale-up theory and practice by exploring the socio-cultural factors at play in the evaluation and scale-up of three interventions within the clinical field. Methods A qualitative multiple case study was conducted to characterize the evaluation and scale-up efforts of three interventions. We interviewed 18 participants, including clinicians and researchers across the three cases. Using Pierre Bourdieu’s concepts of field and capital as a theoretical lens, we conducted a thematic analysis of the data. Results Despite the espoused goals of ensuring that health service interventions are always based on high-quality evidence within the clinical field, this study demonstrates that the outcomes of the evaluations are not the only factor in the decision to engage in scale-up efforts. Important socio-cultural factors also come into play. Bourdieu uses the term capital to refer to the resources that agents compete for and with their acquisition, accumulate power and/or social standing. The type of evidence valued in the clinical field and the ability to leverage capital in demonstrating that value are also important factors. Conclusions Determining if an intervention is effective and should be scaled up is more complex in practice than described in the literature. Efforts are needed to explicitly include the role of social processes in the current frameworks guiding scaling-up efforts.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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