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Current Challenges in Evaluating Utilisation. Little conceptual clarity and murky languageDominant focus on evaluating technical interventions (instrumental utilisation)Linear and logical approaches to evaluation that don't always take account of complex organisationsReliance on input and output models of evaluation.
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1. A Pragmatic approach to Evaluation in Utilisation Research Professor Brendan McCormack
(with Rob Garbett)
2. Current Challenges in Evaluating Utilisation Little conceptual clarity and murky language
Dominant focus on evaluating technical interventions (instrumental utilisation)
Linear and logical approaches to evaluation that don’t always take account of complex organisations
Reliance on input and output models of evaluation
3. Current Challenges in Evaluating Utilisation Complexity of decision-making processes, meaning that no single evaluation mechanism can capture this complexity
The balance of process and outcome and the privileging of one over the other
`Evidence-based person-centred practice’ – what are we doing to evaluate the person-centredness?
What is it we are evaluating?
4. Where is the evaluation of person-centeredness in the current utilisation agenda? Receiving the right intervention, at the right time etc based on an assessment of a need/problem
Person as a disconnected entity from the context in which they receive healthcare
Practitioners as disconnected entities from the contexts in which they provide healthcare
5. A Problem - ‘Unclean’ endoscopes Major public concern and media profile
RGH – 3000+ patients recalled
2 departments in RGH involved – DPU and main theatre suite (Same unit)
DPU = no cases of contaminated scopes
Main theatres = many cases of contaminated scopes
DPU use guidelines developed by the ‘Association of Endoscopic Surgeons’
Main theatres use guidelines developed by the ‘National Association of Theatre Nurses’
Similar but differently worded guidelines leading to differing interpretations
6. What questions does this example raise for us? Why the use of two different sets of guidelines in the same unit?
What interpretations led to safe and unsafe practices?
What changes would have led to the agreement of ‘best practice’?
What contextual factors acted as barriers to the sharing of knowledge?
7. Contextual Factors as Barriers Person-centred perioperative nursing project (Kerr, McCormack et al, in progress)
150 hours of non-participant observation
Appreciative inquiry groups
Stakeholder analysis with steering group
8. Barriers Identified Culture of busyness ‘call for the next one!’
Inconsistent/inappropriate approaches and styles of leadership
Ineffective use of the nursing resource available
Poor delineation of roles
Reactive training rather than learning through practice
Factions, Cliques and Tribes
Lack of person-centredness, i.e.
Patient as product
Nurse as producer
Doctors as product controllers
Managers as quality controllers
9. Context PARiHS Framework: Culture, Leadership and Evaluation
Evaluation [weak]:
Absence of feedback
Narrow use of performance information
Reliance on single methods
10. Being person centred Creating the conditions that help us to:
Know another as a unique individual
Understand and acknowledge individuals beliefs, values, wants and needs
Provide care characterised by flexibility, mutuality, respect and care
Create environments that are flexible, respectful and caring of peoplebbbb
11. The person centered nursing project 8 clinical areas in the intervention group, 3 in the control group
Includes critical care, acute areas, peri-operative care, rehabilitation and clinics
12. Methodology Quasi-experimental design
Pre-post test; Instruments to measure particular dependent variables via patient and staff questionnaires at 4 monthly intervals
Intervention Phase
Practice Development (PD) Framework
Mapping the journey
Qualitative data sources
13. Quantitative measures Two questionnaires developed and administered
Nursing Context Index (NCI)
21 Constructs/ Caring Dimensions Index
Perceptions of Nursing Index (PNI)
Satisfaction and Experience of being nursed
14. Qualitative sources Taping of interactions
Practically challenging
Field notes
Meetings, working with individuals
Thoughts and feelings
Contextual issues: staffing, competing priorities etc.
15. Using the data ‘Problematising’
Workload scores and ‘well, what do we do with our time?’
Questioning and reflecting
Communicating constructs and ‘how do we get through to people?’
Confirming
16. ‘Food for thought’ ‘The project is giving us food for thought, especially the information from the nurse questionnaires, it gives us an idea of how the staff are really thinking. Also what (our facilitator) has told us what she is hearing on the tapes.
‘This project has spurred us to make changes which we never had thought we needed to make, for example how EENT and recovery are actually managed staff wise. It has identified that we need to perhaps have more senior staff nurse grades. And the noise level in the unit has been reduced after feedback.
‘I particularly enjoy being involved. It has certainly motivated me to make and accept changes and differences to the department to ensure that it is more patient centred and person centred.
‘I know that over time when staff do see the benefits to patients, the department and to themselves that they will be less timid about the project. This will take time and more upbeat promotion from the team …’
17. Mapping the journey Evidence of reduced stress in all intervention areas over 1 year
Greater sense of feeling supported and of workload becoming more manageable
18. Some examples ‘Not enough time to complete all nursing tasks’
October ’03: 40% said often, frequently or always
April ’04: 21% said often, frequently or always
‘Not enough staff to adequately cover the unit’
October ’03: 80% said often, frequently or always
April ’04: 53% said often, frequently or always
‘Lack of opportunities to talk openly about problems on the ward’
October ’03: 40% said often, frequently or always
April ’04: 5% said often, frequently or always
19. Tape recorded data: Interaction between nurses and patients (2)
20. Reduction in stress Evidence that staff feel:
More appreciated
Clearer about their own development
More supported in the workplace
21. Some examples Work in the clinical areas has provided opportunities for people to talk, and the emphasis of person centeredness is resulting in more openness
‘People are saying things to each other that wouldn’t do at the beginning …’
Working on changes provides people with recognition and affirmation
‘This project has given me a new interest …’
22. Feeling more in control The journey in intensive care:
Taking control over continuity of care
Becoming more reflective, learning from practice
24. Evaluation as praxis Praxis:
Doing action.
Concerned with an ‘ethical end’ that cannot always be predetermined in advance and is context dependent
Quality of the end product is inseparable from the process of getting there.
Not rule-following behaviour but based on ‘practical; wisdom’, i.e. combined perception, reasoning, virtue and technical competence.
25. A Programmatic Approach
26. Conclusions Using multiple sources of data allows us to demonstrate the impact of a practice development programme over time
Placing a quasi-experimental design within an overarching philosophy of ‘praxis’ enables ownership, participation and changes in culture whilst ensuring rigour.
A programmatic approach to evaluation may offer us a way forward in the development of our understandings of knowledge use