Chapter 9 Flashcards
Describe the Transtheoretical Model
How clinicians respond to new knowledge depends on their readiness
to make changes at the time the information is provided
Focus is on the individual
What are the stages of change in the transtheoretical model?
Precontemplation: consciousness raising
Contemplation: emotional arousal
Preparation: commitment
Action: reward
Maintenance: environmental-reevaluation
What are the stages of the Innovation Decision Process Model?
- Knowledge (learning about a new idea)
- Persuasion (forming an opinion about the idea)
- Decision (deciding to use the idea or not)
- Implementation (trying out the new idea)
- Confirmation (evaluating the implementation of the idea)
What are methods of knowledge translation?
◦ Continuing education courses (interactive or didactic)
◦ Expert opinion
◦ Journal articles/educational materials
◦ Research summaries/abstracts
◦ Audit and feedback
◦ Reminders
◦ Educational outreach (academic detailing)
◦ Influential educational leaders/opinion leaders
◦ Clinical guidelines
◦ Patient-mediated interventions
What are the 5 key strategies for knowledge translation?
- Cultural approach (artifacts, symbols, storytelling, socializing to affect
tacit knowledge) - Multi-sector partnerships (bring different strengths together)
- Conferences and conference leverage (push out or pull in knowledge)
- Research summaries (tailored specifically; wide range of audiences)
- Supportive infrastructures
How does technology enable knowledge transfer?
Information and communication technologies that push out evidence
◦ Handheld PDAs give physicians immediate access to knowledge
◦ Likely the way of the future (few/no innovations currently in rehab)
◦ Assist practitioners with info access and uptake
◦ Improve speed of uptake of research in policy making
◦ Facilitate transfer of public data to policy makers
◦ Support communities of practice–shared knowledge
What is the knowledge-driven model of evidence based policy?
- Research
- Technological development
- Use (adoption of technology)
- Quality of implemented actions
- Outcomes
Requires perfect knowledge and assumes knowledge will be adopted without impediment; unrealistic
Describe the problem-driven model of evidence-based policy.
- Definition of a problem
- ID of missing knowledge
- Acquisition of knowledge, various possible channels
- Interpretation for the problem situation
- Use (adoption of technology)
Acknowledges that evidence distribution is not always perfect and that policy makers tend to draw upon previously availible information
Describe the research transfer model as a three-pronged mechanism.
- Input—Emphasis on preparing practitioners to gather and assimilate new information.
- Throughput—Interpreting knowledge to be useful for individuals, preparing to teach others the
knowledge. - Output—Reflection on research process and improvements; feedback loop.
What are practice guidelines?
Consist of series of clinical recommendations that have been assembles from the best possible evidence
Describe the difference in how researchers and decision makers see evidence in policy.
Researchers see evidence in policy as a fundamentally linear and rational process; decision makers see more variety and are less likely to act on a single piece of evidence.