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Making sense of evidence in management decisions: the role of research-based knowledge on innovation adoption and implementation in healthcare. study protocol

DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-22

Keywords: Evidence, Sensemaking, Innovation adoption, Infection prevention, Qualitative, National Health Service (NHS), Hospital, Implementation

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Abstract:

The study will involve nine comparative case study sites of acute care organisations grouped into three regional clusters across England. Each of the purposefully selected sites represents a variety of trust types and organisational contexts. We will use qualitative methods, in-depth interviews, observation of key meetings, and systematic analysis of relevant secondary data to understand the rationale and challenges involved in sourcing and utilising innovation evidence in the empirical setting of infection prevention and control. We will use theories of innovation adoption and sensemaking in organisations to interpret the data. The research will provide lessons for the uptake and continuous use of innovations in the English and international health systems.Unlike most innovation studies, which involve single-level analysis, our study will explore the innovation-adoption process at multiple embedded levels: micro (individual), meso (organisational), and macro (interorganisational). By comparing and contrasting across the nine sites, each with different organisational contexts, local networks, leadership styles, and different innovations considered for adoption, the findings of the study will have wide relevance. The research will produce actionable findings responding to the political and economic need for healthcare organisations to be innovation-ready.Health service delivery and organisation as well as clinical practice can be improved through the introduction of novel interventions whose effectiveness is backed by sound evidence. However, the uptake and implementation of innovations in healthcare has often proved challenging and, in some cases, very slow [1,2]. As a result, research findings are not always translated into changes in clinical and managerial practice. This reality also raises the pressing question of how to spread best practice and implement promising innovations within complex settings such as the UK's National Health Service (NHS), a large, profe

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