1. Toward a more comprehensive understanding of organizational influences on implementation: the organization theory for implementation science framework
- Author
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Birken, Sarah A., Wagi, Cheyenne R., Peluso, Alexandra G., Kegler, Michelle C., Baloh, Jure, Adsul, Prajakta, Fernandez, Maria E., Masud, Manal, Huang, Terry T-K, Lee, Matthew, Wangen, Mary, Nilsen, Per, Bender, Miriam, Choy-Brown, Mimi, Ryan, Grace, Randazzo, Aliza, Ko, Linda K., Birken, Sarah A., Wagi, Cheyenne R., Peluso, Alexandra G., Kegler, Michelle C., Baloh, Jure, Adsul, Prajakta, Fernandez, Maria E., Masud, Manal, Huang, Terry T-K, Lee, Matthew, Wangen, Mary, Nilsen, Per, Bender, Miriam, Choy-Brown, Mimi, Ryan, Grace, Randazzo, Aliza, and Ko, Linda K.
- Abstract
IntroductionImplementation is influenced by factors beyond individual clinical settings. Nevertheless, implementation research often focuses on factors related to individual providers and practices, potentially due to limitations of available frameworks. Extant frameworks do not adequately capture the myriad organizational influences on implementation. Organization theories capture diverse organizational influences but remain underused in implementation science. To advance their use among implementation scientists, we distilled 70 constructs from nine organization theories identified in our previous work into theoretical domains in the Organization Theory for Implementation Science (OTIS) framework.MethodsThe process of distilling organization theory constructs into domains involved concept mapping and iterative consensus-building. First, we recruited organization and implementation scientists to participate in an online concept mapping exercise in which they sorted organization theory constructs into domains representing similar theoretical concepts. Multidimensional scaling and hierarchical cluster analyses were used to produce visual representations (clusters) of the relationships among constructs in concept maps. Second, to interpret concept maps, we engaged members of the Cancer Prevention and Control Research Network (CPCRN) OTIS workgroup in consensus-building discussions.ResultsTwenty-four experts participated in concept mapping. Based on resulting construct groupings coherence, OTIS workgroup members selected the 10-cluster solution (from options of 7-13 clusters) and then reorganized clusters in consensus-building discussions to increase coherence. This process yielded six final OTIS domains: organizational characteristics (e.g., size; age); governance and operations (e.g., organizational and social subsystems); tasks and processes (e.g., technology cycles; excess capacity); knowledge and learning (e.g., tacit knowledge; sense making); characteristics of a, Funding Agencies|Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) - CDC/HHS (Cooperative Agreement) [U48 DP006400]
- Published
- 2023
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