Helen Bevan, Diane Ketley, Roseanna Cawthorne, Charitini Stavropoulou, Harry Scarbrough
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In this paper, we make a distinction between spreading and scaling innovations and spreading and scaling good practices for improvement, as many healthcare change practitioners often feel there is a “muddle” between them. We argue there are multiple factors where the spread and scale factors are similar for innovation and improvement, such as enabling leadership, the capacity and capability for spread and scale, a process of behaviour change, use of data and evidence and system alignment. However, there are multiple characteristics that may be different, including the level of complexity, the nature of the intervention, the approach to fidelity and adaptability, the source of the innovation or improvement and the outcome metrics. These insights enable us to be better equipped to design and deliver successful spread and scale strategies tailored to the specific intervention and situation and realise the full benefits of our change initiatives.
期刊介绍:
Healthcare is undergoing a revolution and novel medical technologies are being developed to treat patients in better and faster ways. Mobile revolution has put a handheld computer in pockets of billions and we are ushering in an era of mHealth. In developed and developing world alike healthcare costs are a concern and frugal innovations are being promoted for bringing down the costs of healthcare. BMJ Innovations aims to promote innovative research which creates new, cost-effective medical devices, technologies, processes and systems that improve patient care, with particular focus on the needs of patients, physicians, and the health care industry as a whole and act as a platform to catalyse and seed more innovations. Submissions to BMJ Innovations will be considered from all clinical areas of medicine along with business and process innovations that make healthcare accessible and affordable. Submissions from groups of investigators engaged in international collaborations are especially encouraged. The broad areas of innovations that this journal aims to chronicle include but are not limited to: Medical devices, mHealth and wearable health technologies, Assistive technologies, Diagnostics, Health IT, systems and process innovation.