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Open Access 01-12-2023 | Research

Understanding collaborative implementation between community and academic partners in a complex intervention: a qualitative descriptive study

Authors: Rebecca Clark, Jessica Gaber, Julie Datta, Samina Talat, Sivan Bomze, Sarah Marentette-Brown, Cherie Gagnon, Doug Oliver, Larkin Lamarche, Pamela Forsyth, Tracey Carr, David Price, Dee Mangin

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2023

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Abstract

Background

Community-academic partnerships (CAPs) can improve the relevance, sustainability, and uptake of new innovations within the community. However, little is known about what topics CAPs focus on and how their discussions and decisions impact implementation at ground level. The objectives of this study were to better understand the activities and learnings from implementation of a complex health intervention by a CAP at the planner/decision-maker level, and how that compared to experiences implementing the program at local sites.

Methods

The intervention, Health TAPESTRY, was implemented by a nine-partner CAP including academic, charitable organizations, and primary care practices. Meeting minutes were analyzed using qualitative description, latent content analysis, and a member check with key implementors. An open-answer survey about the best and worst elements of the program was completed by clients and health care providers and analyzed using thematic analysis.

Results

In total, 128 meeting minutes were analyzed, 278 providers and clients completed the survey, and six people participated in the member check. Prominent topics of discussion categories from the meeting minutes were: primary care sites, volunteer coordination, volunteer experience, internal and external connections, and sustainability and scalability. Clients liked that they learned new things and gained awareness of community programs, but did not like the volunteer visit length. Clinicians liked the regular interprofessional team meetings but found the program time-consuming.

Conclusions

An important learning was about who had “voice” at the planner/decision-maker level: many of the topics discussed in meeting minutes were not identified as issues or lasting impacts by clients or providers; this may be due to differing roles and needs, but may also identify a gap. Overall, we identified three phases that could serve as a guide for other CAPs: Phase (1) recruitment, financial support, and data ownership; Phase (2) considerations for modifications and adaptations; Phase (3) active input and reflection.
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Metadata
Title
Understanding collaborative implementation between community and academic partners in a complex intervention: a qualitative descriptive study
Authors
Rebecca Clark
Jessica Gaber
Julie Datta
Samina Talat
Sivan Bomze
Sarah Marentette-Brown
Cherie Gagnon
Doug Oliver
Larkin Lamarche
Pamela Forsyth
Tracey Carr
David Price
Dee Mangin
Publication date
01-12-2023
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2023
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-09617-y

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