Annals of Family Medicine
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Annals of Family Medicine 3:S54-S56 (2005)
© 2005 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.
doi: 10.1370/afm.358

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Mutual Learning and the Transformation of Study Intervention Tools

Lisa E. Gordon, MA1 and Susan A. Flocke, PhD1,2

1 Department of Family Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
2 Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Susan A. Flocke, PhD, 11001 Cedar Ave, Suite 306, Cleveland, OH 44106-7136, susan.flocke{at}case.edu

Key Words: Health promotion • practice-based research network • health promotion/disease prevention • Internet • health behavior • patient education


    PURPOSE
 TOP
 PURPOSE
 METHODS
 LESSONS LEARNED
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
We planned a multicomponent intervention to increase primary care practices’ provision of health behavior advice and patients’ access to resources for health behavior change. The intervention included 2 tools: (1) a Web-based resource (http://www.arch2healthyhabits.org) consisting of a database of community programs for health behavior change (eg, smoking cessation classes) and links to health behavior self-management resources (eg, change strategies), and (2) a prescription pad for health behavior change (Pad).1 The pocket-sized Pad, measuring 4 in by 6 in, was designed to facilitate clinician-patient discussion of health behaviors and to prompt treatment planning. The uniform resource locator (URL) and a checklist of major sections of the Web-based resource were preprinted on the Pad to assist clinicians in directing patients to the resource for additional change support. This article describes the exchanges between the study team and the participating practices that resulted in successive innovative iterations of the Pad.


    METHODS
 TOP
 PURPOSE
 METHODS
 LESSONS LEARNED
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
Seven practices from the Research Association of Practices (RAP), a practice-based research network, participated in the study. Practices were recruited and interventions were implemented on a rolling basis. The study had a pretest-posttest design and involved both quantitative and qualitative data collection. A practice facilitator collected 1 to 2 days of baseline ethnographic data including observations of the practice’s physical systems (eg, computer availability), current approaches to providing health behavior advice, and staff attitudes toward health promotion. Similar data were collected after the intervention. In combination with baseline patient survey data about current health behaviors and receipt of health behavior advice, the qualitative data were summarized into a practice report.

The practice facilitator led a practicewide planning meeting to discuss the baseline data and how the intervention tools might be tailored and implemented. At the close of the meeting, the facilitator encouraged formation of a smaller team consisting of a variety of practice members. This team and the facilitator met several times to brainstorm ideas, discuss options, and generate final tailoring decisions. Team decisions were typically arrived at by consensus, although clinicians’ opinions tended to carry greater weight in most of the practices.

After implementation of the intervention, ongoing interchanges between the practice and the facilitator continued in the form of telephone calls with key team members to learn how implementation plans were proceeding, drop-in visits to check supplies and maintenance of intervention procedures, and for some practices, additional team meetings to solve implementation problems. Field notes documenting each contact with a practice member were recorded.


    LESSONS LEARNED
 TOP
 PURPOSE
 METHODS
 LESSONS LEARNED
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
The participatory approach to tailoring the intervention and the ongoing implementation support provided by the facilitator led to a synergistic exchange of creative ideas among practices, resulting in substantial changes to the Pad. With the practice facilitator acting as a conveyor of key information about each practice’s tailoring decisions, accumulated wisdom was shared at practice team meetings to adapt the tools in successively more innovative ways. The facilitator’s stories of past developments from previously launched practices spurred brainstorming and discussion at each successive practice, resulting in additional modifications in accordance with the needs of that practice. Table 1Go depicts the sequence of events that led to one major change in the Pad.


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Table 1. An Example of the Sequential Transformation of the Pad
 
Through ongoing, iterative conveyance of practices’ innovative ideas via the facilitator, the Pad’s design and method of use were further modified. For example, practice 6 engaged medical assistants to check off health behavior topics the patient wished to discuss. The Pad was then clipped to the chart for the clinician. Used in this manner, the Pad was transformed into a screening tool and clinician reminder. Other innovations included printing the Pad in a distinctive color to enhance its use as a clinician reminder and adding visual icons for use with low-literacy patients in place of written advice.2 What started as a prescription pad for health behavior change was transformed through the cumulative wisdom of 7 practices into a new, multipurpose tool.


    CONCLUSIONS
 TOP
 PURPOSE
 METHODS
 LESSONS LEARNED
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
Although we intended to tailor the tools to practices’ needs, the methods used in this study facilitated changes in the tools’ intended use and design beyond our expectations. For such innovations to occur, the research team must assume roles as both learners and conduits of cumulative participant wisdom, rather than as experts.


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We wish to acknowledge the clinicians, staffs, and patients from the 7 family practices that participated in this project: Neighborhood Family Practice; the practice of Drs Weinberger and Vizy, and Ms DuBay, PA; the practice of Dr Kellner; the practice of Dr Kirsch; Southwest Family Physicians; the Metrohealth Thomas F. McCafferty Health Center; and University Primary Care (Bedford location).


    FOOTNOTES
 
Conflicts of interest: none reported

Funding support: This project was supported by Prescription for Health (grant No. 049058, Dr Flocke), a national program of The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation with support from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Dr Flocke was also supported in part by a career development award from the National Cancer Institute (CA 86046).

Received for publication January 25, 2005. Revision received March 15, 2005. Accepted for publication March 21, 2005.


    REFERENCES
 TOP
 PURPOSE
 METHODS
 LESSONS LEARNED
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 

  1. Swinburn BA, Walter LG, Arroll B, Tilyard MW, Russell DG. The green prescription study: a randomized controlled trial of written exercise advice provided by general practitioners. Am J Public Health. 1998;88:288–291.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Houts PS, Witmer JT, Egeth HE, Loscalzo MJ, Zabora JR. Using pictographs to enhance recall of spoken medical instructions II. Patient Educ Couns. 2001;43:231–242.[CrossRef][Medline]




This Article
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Right arrow Articles by Flocke, S. A.
Related Collections
Right arrow Health promotion
Right arrow PBRN research
Right arrow Organizational / practice change


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