Authors

  1. Virani, Tazim RN BScN MScN PhD

Article Content

Practitioners frequently complain of barriers to implementing practice changes such as lack of buy-in, lack of time, heavy workload and insufficient resources; and yet interventions to improve the uptake of evidence-based practices in research studies and practice settings appear to ignore these important variables in the design of the knowledge uptake interventions. The Josefsson et al. article in this issue1 identified practical and structural barriers to the use of evidence-based practice, while Toh et al.2 identified shortage of staff as a factor in job satisfaction among nurses. Ignoring these organisational barriers is futile - wheels are spun and the gap between research and practice continues to remain constant.

 

When implementing clinical practice changes in organised care (e.g. hospitals, nursing homes, home care agencies, primary care practices), individual practitioners are not always able to change their practices without organisational sanctions and support.3,4 To better understand and support clinical practice change in organised care, I argue that researchers and practitioners have failed to leverage the availability of organisational theory/theories to understand, design and study interventions that can address the recurrent organisational or context barriers.

 

Implementing evidence-based practices is highly context dependent.3 Rycroft-Malone et al.5 included context as one of the three main variables in the widely cited, although not adequately tested6 Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (PaRiHS) framework to support the uptake of evidence-based practices; the other two variables are being evidence and facilitation. They proposed that the successful implementation of practice change is influenced by the nature of the context such as the prevailing culture, leadership roles, availability of resources and the fit of the practice with organisational structures and procedures. Similarly, Grol and Wensing7 identified organisational context as a key category of barriers for drivers of change in clinical practice in their review of barriers to practice change. They identified organisation of care processes, staff, capacities, resources and structures as examples of organisation context barriers.

 

What is disturbing is that the calls for research to better understand the uptake of clinical evidence at the organisational level or context8-10 has had little response. A recent repeat systematic review on organisational infrastructure to promote the uptake of evidence-based practice concluded that there is a dearth of research studies evaluating organisational infrastructure interventions.11 In fact, the reviewers were able to include only one such study based on their inclusion criteria. The previous systematic review was empty.12 Organisational infrastructure was defined as the framework within which care is delivered and supported. Infrastructure can be thought of as the policies, people, processes and tools that support care provision and include examples such as supports for capacity development, routines in providing care, policies on such aspects as scope of practice and service delivery models, protocols, clinical pathways, standing orders, information and communication systems, mechanisms to discuss care issues such as clinical rounds, materials and equipment, space and so on.

 

Addressing organisational level barriers in designing practice change interventions is needed considerably. Using organisational theory to frame the design of interventions will anchor practice and research and promote a sound knowledge base for the uptake of evidence-based practice change. One such organisation theory is organisational learning theory13 which can be useful in designing and studying the interventions for implementing practice change and uptake of evidence-based practices.

 

Organisational learning is the searching, acquiring, storing, retrieving and use of knowledge to meet organisational objectives.13 Each of these organisational learning processes is influenced by organisational characteristics (as was found in Fareed's14 study on hospital size). For example, the process of storing knowledge is dependent on the availability of carriers of knowledge such as policies, procedures, training modules, stories as a form of cultural carrier, etc.15 The ability of the organisation to store knowledge and initiate its use when required is referred to as organisational memory.15 Successful implementation of practice change is, therefore, a function of the organisational infrastructure and supports to facilitate successful organisational learning and organisational memory. Designing interventions with such theories as organisational learning confronts the well-established barriers to practice change such as lack of time and resources16 and misfit with organisational priorities.17

 

In order to call attention to organisational factors that support or hinder practice change, it is imperative that managers of organised healthcare have a greater knowledge and understanding of evidence-based practice and organisational change. It is not only the purview of clinicians who need to engage in evidence-based practice but also managers who need to pave the path for effective conditions within which such practices can flourish. Specifically, leveraging direction from organisational learning, it is possible to support the institutionalisation of practices through processes such as appropriate formats for storing, retrieval and use. For example, storing practice knowledge requires modification of existing structures such as admission and assessment processes or a different routine in the discharge protocol. Managers can be helpful in identifying and enabling the organisational processes to making these changes in the most efficient way possible. Using clinician time to navigate the complexity of organisations is not an appropriate use of their expertise and time. Additionally, managers and leaders in organisations need to be vigilant in reinforcing practice changes through strategies such as audit and feedback, quality improvement cycles, practice prompts and reminders.3

 

I conclude with two calls for action. First, interventions to address barriers to practice change must go beyond the individual and address context-related barriers. It is no longer appropriate to provide education and training to staff as the only mechanism to bring about clinical practice change. Continuing education is an important but not sufficient intervention. Assessing local contextual barriers and addressing these upfront in the design of interventions is critical. Tailoring the interventions to the local context has been recommended previously3,7,18 and needs to continue to be a guiding principle. The goal should be to search for ways to have knowledge 'stick' in organisational work flow and processes while making it easy for practitioners to use evidence-based practice through the use of cues and reminders that are engineered in the organisational structures and processes.3 The institutionalisation of a safety checklist in surgical care, for example, is a key organisational tool that has been shown to integrate well in the workflow and design of operating room culture and set up while significantly reducing post-surgical morbidity and mortality.19

 

Second, as has been called for previously,8-10 I lend my voice to the call for the use of organisational theory in supporting evidence-based practice, in organised care settings and to frame implementation research at the organisation level. It is time to create balanced attention beyond the individual healthcare provider and focus on the context.

 

References

 

1. Josefsson KA, Kammerlind A-SC, Sund-Levander M. Evidence-based practice in a multiprofessional context. Int J Evid Based Healthc, 2012; 117-125. [Context Link]

 

2. Toh SG, Ang E, Devi MK. Systematic review on the relationship between the nursing shortage and job satisfaction, stress and burnout levels among nurses in oncology/haematology settings. Int J Evid Based Healthc, 2012; 126-141. [Context Link]

 

3. Titler MG. The evidence or evidence-based practice implementation. In: Hughes RG, ed. Patient Safety and Quality: An Evidence-Based Handbook for Nurses. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (US), 2008; 113-161. [Context Link]

 

4. Wensing M, Wollersheim H, Grol R. Organizational interventions to implement improvements in patient care: a structured review of reviews. Implement Sci, 2006; 1: 2. [Context Link]

 

5. Rycroft-Malone J, Kitson A, Harvey G. et al. Ingredients for change: revisiting a conceptual framework. Qual Saf Health Care, 2002; 11: 174-80. [Context Link]

 

6. National Collaborating Centre for Methods and Tools. PaRiHS Framework for Implementing Research into Practice. Hamilton, ON: McMaster University, 2011. Accessed 12 May 2012. Available from: http://www.nccmt.ca/registry/view/eng/85.html. [Context Link]

 

7. Grol R, Wensing M. What drives change? Barriers to and incentives for achieving evidence-based practice. Med J Aust, 2004; 180: S57-S60. [Context Link]

 

8. Estabrooks CA, Scott-Findlay S, Winther C. A nursing and allied health sciences perspective on knowledge utilization. In: Lemieux-Charles L, Champagne F, eds. Using Knowledge and Evidence in Health Care: Multidisciplinary Perspective. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2004; 242-80. [Context Link]

 

9. Grimshaw JM, Thomas RE, MacLennan G. et al. Effectiveness and efficiency of guideline dissemination and implementation strategies . 2004. Accessed December 2004. Available from: http://www.hta.ac.uk. [Context Link]

 

10. Rycroft-Malone J. Theory and knowledge translation: setting some coordinates. Nurs Res, 2007; 56: S78-S85. [Context Link]

 

11. Flodgren G, Rojas-Reyes MX, Cole N, Foxcroft DR. Effectiveness of organisational infrastructures to promote evidence-based nursing practice. Cochrane Database Syst Rev, 2012; (2): CD002212. DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD002212.pub2. [Context Link]

 

12. Foxcroft DR, Cole N. Organisational infrastructures to promote evidence based nursing practice. Cochrane Database Syst Rev, 2003; (4): CD002212. DOI:10.1002/14651858. [Context Link]

 

13. Argote L. Organizational Learning: Creating, Retaining, and Transferring Knowledge. Boston: Kluwer Academic, 1999. [Context Link]

 

14. Fareed N. Size matters: a meta-analysis on the impact of hospital size on patient mortality. Int J Evid Based Healthc, 2012; 103-111. [Context Link]

 

15. Virani T, Lemieux-Charles L, Davis D, Berta W. Sustaining change: one evidence-based practices are transferred, what then? Healthc Q, 2009; 12: 89-96. [Context Link]

 

16. Atkinson M, Turkel M, Cashy J. Overcoming barriers to research in a Magnet community hospital. J Nurs Care Qual, 2008; 23: 362-8. [Context Link]

 

17. Pravikoff DS, Tanner AB, Pierce ST. Readiness of U.S. nurses for evidence-based practice: many don't understand or value research and have had little or no training to help them find evidence on which to base their practice. Am J Nurs, 2005; 105: 40-51. [Context Link]

 

18. Stetler CB. Role of the organization in translating research into evidence-based practice. Outcomes Manag, 2003; 7: 97-105. [Context Link]

 

19. Hayes AB, Weiser TG, Berry WR. et al. A surgical safety checklist to reduce morbidity and mortality in a global population. N Engl J Med, 2009; 360: 491-9. [Context Link]