Evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedback

Abstract Background A range of evidence informs decision-making on innovation in health care, including formal research findings, local data and professional opinion. However, cultural and organisational factors often prevent the translation of evidence for innovations into practice. In addition to...

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Main Authors: Simon Turner, Danielle D’Lima, Emma Hudson, Stephen Morris, Jessica Sheringham, Nick Swart, Naomi J. Fulop
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-12-01
Series:Implementation Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-017-0669-6
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spelling doaj-129c5a9c42bd46d1912ebe1218bc56122020-11-25T01:40:04ZengBMCImplementation Science1748-59082017-12-0112111210.1186/s13012-017-0669-6Evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedbackSimon Turner0Danielle D’Lima1Emma Hudson2Stephen Morris3Jessica Sheringham4Nick Swart5Naomi J. Fulop6Centre for Primary Care, Division of Population Health, Health Services Research and Primary Care, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of ManchesterDepartment of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, UCL Centre for Behaviour Change, University College LondonDepartment of Applied Health Research, University College LondonDepartment of Applied Health Research, University College LondonDepartment of Applied Health Research, University College LondonDepartment of Applied Health Research, University College LondonDepartment of Applied Health Research, University College LondonAbstract Background A range of evidence informs decision-making on innovation in health care, including formal research findings, local data and professional opinion. However, cultural and organisational factors often prevent the translation of evidence for innovations into practice. In addition to the characteristics of evidence, it is known that processes at the individual level influence its impact on decision-making. Less is known about the ways in which processes at the professional, organisational and local system level shape evidence use and its role in decisions to adopt innovations. Methods A systematic scoping review was used to review the health literature on innovations within acute and primary care and map processes at the professional, organisational and local system levels which influence how evidence informs decision-making on innovation. Stakeholder feedback on the themes identified was collected via focus groups to test and develop the findings. Results Following database and manual searches, 31 studies reporting primary qualitative data met the inclusion criteria: 24 were of sufficient methodological quality to be included in the thematic analysis. Evidence use in decision-making on innovation is influenced by multi-level processes (professional, organisational, local system) and interactions across these levels. Preferences for evidence vary by professional group and health service setting. Organisations can shape professional behaviour by requiring particular forms of evidence to inform decision-making. Pan-regional organisations shape innovation decision-making at lower levels. Political processes at all levels shape the selection and use of evidence in decision-making. Conclusions The synthesis of results from primary qualitative studies found that evidence use in decision-making on innovation is influenced by processes at multiple levels. Interactions between different levels shape evidence use in decision-making (e.g. professional groups and organisations can use local systems to validate evidence and legitimise innovations, while local systems can tailor or frame evidence to influence activity at lower levels). Organisational leaders need to consider whether the environment in which decisions are made values diverse evidence and stakeholder perspectives. Further qualitative research on decision-making practices that highlights how and why different types of evidence come to count during decisions, and tracks the political aspects of decisions about innovation, is needed.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-017-0669-6EvidenceInnovationService improvementDecision-makingQualitativeProfessions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simon Turner
Danielle D’Lima
Emma Hudson
Stephen Morris
Jessica Sheringham
Nick Swart
Naomi J. Fulop
spellingShingle Simon Turner
Danielle D’Lima
Emma Hudson
Stephen Morris
Jessica Sheringham
Nick Swart
Naomi J. Fulop
Evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedback
Implementation Science
Evidence
Innovation
Service improvement
Decision-making
Qualitative
Professions
author_facet Simon Turner
Danielle D’Lima
Emma Hudson
Stephen Morris
Jessica Sheringham
Nick Swart
Naomi J. Fulop
author_sort Simon Turner
title Evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedback
title_short Evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedback
title_full Evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedback
title_fullStr Evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedback
title_full_unstemmed Evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedback
title_sort evidence use in decision-making on introducing innovations: a systematic scoping review with stakeholder feedback
publisher BMC
series Implementation Science
issn 1748-5908
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Abstract Background A range of evidence informs decision-making on innovation in health care, including formal research findings, local data and professional opinion. However, cultural and organisational factors often prevent the translation of evidence for innovations into practice. In addition to the characteristics of evidence, it is known that processes at the individual level influence its impact on decision-making. Less is known about the ways in which processes at the professional, organisational and local system level shape evidence use and its role in decisions to adopt innovations. Methods A systematic scoping review was used to review the health literature on innovations within acute and primary care and map processes at the professional, organisational and local system levels which influence how evidence informs decision-making on innovation. Stakeholder feedback on the themes identified was collected via focus groups to test and develop the findings. Results Following database and manual searches, 31 studies reporting primary qualitative data met the inclusion criteria: 24 were of sufficient methodological quality to be included in the thematic analysis. Evidence use in decision-making on innovation is influenced by multi-level processes (professional, organisational, local system) and interactions across these levels. Preferences for evidence vary by professional group and health service setting. Organisations can shape professional behaviour by requiring particular forms of evidence to inform decision-making. Pan-regional organisations shape innovation decision-making at lower levels. Political processes at all levels shape the selection and use of evidence in decision-making. Conclusions The synthesis of results from primary qualitative studies found that evidence use in decision-making on innovation is influenced by processes at multiple levels. Interactions between different levels shape evidence use in decision-making (e.g. professional groups and organisations can use local systems to validate evidence and legitimise innovations, while local systems can tailor or frame evidence to influence activity at lower levels). Organisational leaders need to consider whether the environment in which decisions are made values diverse evidence and stakeholder perspectives. Further qualitative research on decision-making practices that highlights how and why different types of evidence come to count during decisions, and tracks the political aspects of decisions about innovation, is needed.
topic Evidence
Innovation
Service improvement
Decision-making
Qualitative
Professions
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-017-0669-6
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