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What to expect when you're evaluating healthcare improvement: a concordat approach to managing collaboration and uncomfortable realities.

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journal contribution
posted on 2015-04-21, 14:04 authored by Liz Brewster, Emma-Louise Aveling, Graham Martin, Carolyn Tarrant, Mary Dixon-Woods, Safer Clinical Systems Phase 2 Core Group Collaboration & Writing Committee
Evaluation of improvement initiatives in healthcare is essential to establishing whether interventions are effective and to understanding how and why they work in order to enable replication. Although valuable, evaluation is often complicated by tensions and friction between evaluators, implementers and other stakeholders. Drawing on the literature, we suggest that these tensions can arise from a lack of shared understanding of the goals of the evaluation; confusion about roles, relationships and responsibilities; data burdens; issues of data flows and confidentiality; the discomforts of being studied and the impact of disappointing or otherwise unwelcome results. We present a possible approach to managing these tensions involving the co-production and use of a concordat. We describe how we developed a concordat in the context of an evaluation of a complex patient safety improvement programme known as Safer Clinical Systems Phase 2. The concordat development process involved partners (evaluators, designers, funders and others) working together at the outset of the project to agree a set of principles to guide the conduct of the evaluation. We suggest that while the concordat is a useful resource for resolving conflicts that arise during evaluation, the process of producing it is perhaps even more important, helping to make explicit unspoken assumptions, clarify roles and responsibilities, build trust and establish open dialogue and shared understanding. The concordat we developed established some core principles that may be of value for others involved in evaluation to consider. But rather than seeing our document as a ready-made solution, there is a need for recognition of the value of the process of co-producing a locally agreed concordat in enabling partners in the evaluation to work together effectively.

History

Citation

BMJ Quality & Safety, 2015, 24:318-324

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMJ Quality & Safety

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group

eissn

2044-5423

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2015-04-21

Publisher version

http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/24/5/318

Language

en

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