1st Edition

Complex Interventions in Health An overview of research methods

Edited By David A. Richards Copyright 2015
    408 Pages
    by Routledge

    408 Pages
    by Routledge

    Health and human services currently face a series of challenges – such as aging populations, chronic diseases and new endemics – that require highly complex responses, and take place in multiple care environments including acute medicine, chronic care facilities and the community. Accordingly, most modern health care interventions are now seen as ‘complex interventions’ – activities that contain a number of component parts with the potential for interactions between them which, when applied to the intended target population, produce a range of possible and variable outcomes. This in turn requires methodological developments that also take into account changing values and attitudes related to the situation of patients’ receiving health care. 

    The first book to place complex interventions within a coherent system of research enquiry, this work is designed to help researchers understand the research processes involved at each stage of developing, testing, evaluating and implementing complex interventions, and assist them to integrate methodological activities to produce secure, evidence-based health care interventions. It begins with conceptual chapters which set out the complex interventions framework, discuss the interrelation between knowledge development and evidence, and explore how mixed methods research contributes to improved health. Structured around the influential UK Medical Research Council guidance for use of complex interventions, four sections, each comprised of bite-sized chapters written by multidisciplinary experts in the area, focus on:

    -          Developing complex interventions

    -          Assessing the feasibility of complex interventions and piloting them

    -          Evaluating complex interventions

    -          Implementing complex interventions.

    Accessible to students and researchers grappling with complex interventions, each substantive chapter includes an introduction, bulleted learning objectives, clinical examples, a summary and further reading. The perspectives of various stakeholders, including patients, families and professionals, are discussed throughout as are the economic and ethical implications of methods.

    A vital companion for health research, this book is suitable for readers from multidisciplinary disciplines such as medical, nursing, public health, health services research, human services and allied healthcare backgrounds.

    Foreword  Peter Craig  1. The Complex Interventions Framework  David A Richards  2. Knowledge for Healthcare Practice  Ingalill Rahm Hallberg  3. The Value of Mixed Methods for Researching Complex Interventions  Gunilla Borglin  4. The Critical Importance of Patient and Public Involvement for Research into Complex Interventions  David A Richards  Part 1: Developing Complex Interventions  Part 1 Introduction  Gabriele Meyer and Sascha Köpke  5. Systematic Reviews of the Effects of Interventions  Nicky Cullum and Jo Dumville  6. Advanced Approaches to Evidence Synthesis and its Application to Intervention Design  Nicky Cullum and Jo Dumville  7. Exploring Complexity in Systematic Reviews of Complex Interventions  Sascha Köpke, Jane Noyes, Jackie Chandler and Gabriele Meyer  8. The Synthesis of Qualitative Data  Jo Rycroft-Malone  9. Building a Case for Mixed Method Reviews  Karin Hannes  10. Development of Complex Interventions: Outcome Modelling  Susanne Buhse and Ingrid Mühlhauser  11. Designing Interventions to Change Health-related Behaviour  Charles Abraham, Sarah Denford, Jane Smith, Sarah Dean, Colin Greaves, Jenny Lloyd, Mark Tarrant, Mathew White and Katrina Wyatt  12. Modelling Process and Outcomes in Complex Interventions  Walter Sermeus  Part 2: Investigating the Feasibility and Undertaking Pilot Testing of Complex Interventions: An Introduction  Part 2 Introduction  David A Richards  13. Pilot Studies and Feasibility Studies for Complex Interventions: An Introduction  Lora Giangregorio and Lehana Thabane  14. How to Use Feasibility and Pilot Trials to Test Alternative Methodologies and Methodological Procedures Prior to Full Scale Trials  Rod Taylor, Obioha C Ukoumunne and Fiona C Warren  15. How to Use Feasibility Studies to Derive Parameter Estimates in Order to Power a Full Trial  Obioha C Ukoumunne, Fiona C Warren, Rod S Taylor and Paul Ewings   16. Addressing Issues in Recruitment and Retention Using Feasibility and Pilot Trials  Shaun Treweek  17. Testing the Waters: Piloting a Complex Intervention  Nancy Feeley and Sylvie Cossette  18. Feasibility in Practice: Undertaking a Feasibility Study to Answer Procedural, Methodological and Clinical Questions Prior to a Full-scale Evaluation  David A Richards  Part 3: Evaluation of Complex Interventions  Part 3 Introduction  Ingalill Rahm Hallberg  19. Individually and Cluster Randomised Trials  Sallie Lamb and Douglas Altman  20. Stepped Wedge, Natural Experiments and Interrupted Time Series Analysis Design  Yan Hu  21. Non-standard and Preference Designs  Louise von Essen  22. Single-subject Designs  Lena Nilsson Wikmar and Karin Harms-Ringdahl  23. Process Evaluation of Complex Interventions: A Summary of Medical Research Council Guidance  Graham Moore, Suzanne Audrey, Mary Barker, Lyndal Bond, Chris Bonell, Wendy Hardeman, Laurence Moore, Alicia O'Cathain, Tannaze Tinati, Daniel E. Wight and Janis Baird  24. Intervention Fidelity in Clinical Trials  Henna Hasson  25. Qualitative Process Evaluation for Complex Interventions  Salla Atkins, Willem Odendaal, Natalie Leon, Elizabeth Lutge and Simon Lewin  26. Economic Evaluations of Complex Interventions  Katherine Payne and Alexander J Thompson  Part 4: Implementation of Complex Interventions  Part 4 Introduction  Theo van Achterbeg  27. Implementation Issues: Towards a Systematic and Stepwise Approach  Ted A Skolarus and Anne E Sales  28. Why do Barriers and Facilitators Matter?  Elizabeth J Dogherty and Carole A Estabrooks  29. How to Arrive at an Implementation Plan  Theo van Achterberg  30. Applying Normalization Process Theory to the Implementation of Complex Interventions  Carl May  31. Action Research for the Implementation of Complex Interventions  Brendan McCormack  32. Systems Modelling for Improving Healthcare  Martin Pitt, Thomas Monks and Michael Allen  33. A Few Final Thoughts  Ingalill Rahm Hallberg and David A Richards

    Biography

    David A. Richards is Professor of Mental Health Services Research at the University of Exeter Medical School.  For many years he has been at the forefront of national and international efforts to improve access to treatment for those suffering from high prevalence mental health problems such as depression. A nurse by professional background, he is a UK National Institute of Health Research Senior Investigator, President of the European Academy of Nursing Science and chair of the European Science Foundation REFLECTION Research Network Programme, an interdisciplinary European Faculty of researchers, equipped to design, plan and implement programmatic, mixed methods and complex interventions research. Like Ingalill, he has frequently challenged the research community to reduce waste in their work by refocussing their research activity towards clinically relevant programmes, driven by the uncertainties of clinical practice and the real concerns of the public, patients and clinicians.

    Ingalill Rahm Hallberg is Professor in Health Care Science at Lund University, Sweden. She has been the pro-dean of the Medical Faculty, the assistant vice-chancellor and pro vice-chancellor of Lund University. She is a nurse by professional background. Her research has been on aging, care and services for older people and living with severe diseases, an area in which she has been at the forefront nationally and internationally. Her frequent involvement in reviewing research proposals, research at universities and by research groups nationally and internationally inspired her to initiate a debate on how research was very often scattered, lacking coherent programmes and dominated by descriptive studies with no impact on health care. As the previous president of the European Academy of Nursing Science she was, together with David, a driving force to change the unwelcome preponderance of small-scale, descriptive projects.