Measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: A systematic review and analysis of psychometric quality

Background: Despite their influence, outer setting barriers (e.g., policies, financing) are an infrequent focus of implementation research. The objective of this systematic review was to identify and assess the psychometric properties of measures of outer setting used in behavioral and mental health...

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Main Authors: Sheena McHugh, Caitlin N Dorsey, Kayne Mettert, Jonathan Purtle, Eric Bruns, Cara C Lewis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-07-01
Series:Implementation Research and Practice
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2633489520940022
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spelling doaj-bbf276a536f34081963b1116bdded8552021-07-14T08:04:23ZengSAGE PublishingImplementation Research and Practice2633-48952020-07-01110.1177/2633489520940022Measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: A systematic review and analysis of psychometric qualitySheena McHugh0Caitlin N Dorsey1Kayne Mettert2Jonathan Purtle3Eric Bruns4Cara C Lewis5School of Public Health, University College Cork, Cork, IrelandKaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USAKaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USADepartment of Health Management & Policy, Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USADepartment of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, USAKaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USABackground: Despite their influence, outer setting barriers (e.g., policies, financing) are an infrequent focus of implementation research. The objective of this systematic review was to identify and assess the psychometric properties of measures of outer setting used in behavioral and mental health research. Methods: Data collection involved (a) search string generation, (b) title and abstract screening, (c) full-text review, (d) construct mapping, and (e) measure forward searches. Outer setting constructs were defined using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). The search strategy included four relevant constructs separately: (a) cosmopolitanism, (b) external policy and incentives, (c) patient needs and resources, and (d) peer pressure. Information was coded using nine psychometric criteria: (a) internal consistency, (b) convergent validity, (c) discriminant validity, (d) known-groups validity, (e) predictive validity, (f) concurrent validity, (g) structural validity, (h) responsiveness, and (i) norms. Frequencies were calculated to summarize the availability of psychometric information. Information quality was rated using a 5-point scale and a final median score was calculated for each measure. Results: Systematic searches yielded 20 measures: four measures of the general outer setting domain, seven of cosmopolitanism, four of external policy and incentives, four of patient needs and resources, and one measure of peer pressure. Most were subscales within full scales assessing implementation context. Typically, scales or subscales did not have any psychometric information available. Where information was available, the quality was most often rated as “1-minimal” or “2-adequate.” Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first systematic review to focus exclusively on measures of outer setting factors used in behavioral and mental health research and comprehensively assess a range of psychometric criteria. The results highlight the limited quantity and quality of measures at this level. Researchers should not assume “one size fits all” when measuring outer setting constructs. Some outer setting constructs may be more appropriately and efficiently assessed using objective indices or administrative data reflective of the system rather than the individual.https://doi.org/10.1177/2633489520940022
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sheena McHugh
Caitlin N Dorsey
Kayne Mettert
Jonathan Purtle
Eric Bruns
Cara C Lewis
spellingShingle Sheena McHugh
Caitlin N Dorsey
Kayne Mettert
Jonathan Purtle
Eric Bruns
Cara C Lewis
Measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: A systematic review and analysis of psychometric quality
Implementation Research and Practice
author_facet Sheena McHugh
Caitlin N Dorsey
Kayne Mettert
Jonathan Purtle
Eric Bruns
Cara C Lewis
author_sort Sheena McHugh
title Measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: A systematic review and analysis of psychometric quality
title_short Measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: A systematic review and analysis of psychometric quality
title_full Measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: A systematic review and analysis of psychometric quality
title_fullStr Measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: A systematic review and analysis of psychometric quality
title_full_unstemmed Measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: A systematic review and analysis of psychometric quality
title_sort measures of outer setting constructs for implementation research: a systematic review and analysis of psychometric quality
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Implementation Research and Practice
issn 2633-4895
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Background: Despite their influence, outer setting barriers (e.g., policies, financing) are an infrequent focus of implementation research. The objective of this systematic review was to identify and assess the psychometric properties of measures of outer setting used in behavioral and mental health research. Methods: Data collection involved (a) search string generation, (b) title and abstract screening, (c) full-text review, (d) construct mapping, and (e) measure forward searches. Outer setting constructs were defined using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). The search strategy included four relevant constructs separately: (a) cosmopolitanism, (b) external policy and incentives, (c) patient needs and resources, and (d) peer pressure. Information was coded using nine psychometric criteria: (a) internal consistency, (b) convergent validity, (c) discriminant validity, (d) known-groups validity, (e) predictive validity, (f) concurrent validity, (g) structural validity, (h) responsiveness, and (i) norms. Frequencies were calculated to summarize the availability of psychometric information. Information quality was rated using a 5-point scale and a final median score was calculated for each measure. Results: Systematic searches yielded 20 measures: four measures of the general outer setting domain, seven of cosmopolitanism, four of external policy and incentives, four of patient needs and resources, and one measure of peer pressure. Most were subscales within full scales assessing implementation context. Typically, scales or subscales did not have any psychometric information available. Where information was available, the quality was most often rated as “1-minimal” or “2-adequate.” Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first systematic review to focus exclusively on measures of outer setting factors used in behavioral and mental health research and comprehensively assess a range of psychometric criteria. The results highlight the limited quantity and quality of measures at this level. Researchers should not assume “one size fits all” when measuring outer setting constructs. Some outer setting constructs may be more appropriately and efficiently assessed using objective indices or administrative data reflective of the system rather than the individual.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2633489520940022
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