Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
Background The use of low-value care (LVC) is a persistent challenge in health care. Health technology reassessment (HTR) assesses the effects of technologies currently used in the health care system to guide optimal use of these technologies. Consequently, HTR holds promises for identifying and reducing, i.e., de-implementing, the use of LVC. There is limited research on how HTR is executed to support the de-implementation of LVC and whether and how HTR outcomes are translated into practical application. The aim of this study is to investigate how HTR is conducted to facilitate de-implementation of LVC and to investigate how the results of HTR are received and acted on in health care settings. Methods This study is a qualitative interview study with representatives from health technology assessment agencies (n = 16) that support the regional health care organizations in Sweden and with representatives from the health care organizations (n = 7). Interviews were analysed with qualitative content analysis. Results We identified three overarching categories for how HTR facilitates de-implementation of LVC and how the results are received and acted on in health care settings: (1) involving key stakeholders to facilitate de-implementation of LVC in identifying potential LVC practices, having criteria for accepting HTR targets, ascertaining high-quality reports and disseminating the reports; (2) actions taken by health care organization to de-implement LVC by priority setting and decision-making, networking between health care organizations and monitoring changes in the use of LVC practices; and (3) sustaining use of LVC by not questioning continued use, continued funding of LVC and by creating opinion against de-implementation. Conclusions Evidence is not enough to achieve de-implementation of LVC. This has made health technology assessment agencies and health care organizations widen the scope of HTR to encompass strategies to facilitate de-implementation, including involving key stakeholders in the HTR process and taking actions to support de-implementation. Despite these efforts, there can still be resistance to de-implementation of LVC in passive forms, involving continued use of the practice and more active resistance such as continued funding and opinion-making opposing de-implementation. Knowledge from implementation and de-implementation research can offer guidance in how to support the execution phase of HTR.
Background The use of low-value care (LVC) is a persistent challenge in health care. Health technology reassessment (HTR) assesses the effects of technologies currently used in the health care system to guide optimal use of these technologies. Consequently, HTR holds promises for identifying and reducing, i.e., de-implementing, the use of LVC. There is limited research on how HTR is executed to support the de-implementation of LVC and whether and how HTR outcomes are translated into practical application. The aim of this study is to investigate how HTR is conducted to facilitate de-implementation of LVC and to investigate how the results of HTR are received and acted on in health care settings. Methods This study is a qualitative interview study with representatives from health technology assessment agencies (n = 16) that support the regional health care organizations in Sweden and with representatives from the health care organizations (n = 7). Interviews were analysed with qualitative content analysis. Results We identified three overarching categories for how HTR facilitates de-implementation of LVC and how the results are received and acted on in health care settings: (1) involving key stakeholders to facilitate de-implementation of LVC in identifying potential LVC practices, having criteria for accepting HTR targets, ascertaining high-quality reports and disseminating the reports; (2) actions taken by health care organization to de-implement LVC by priority setting and decision-making, networking between health care organizations and monitoring changes in the use of LVC practices; and (3) sustaining use of LVC by not questioning continued use, continued funding of LVC and by creating opinion against de-implementation. Conclusions Evidence is not enough to achieve de-implementation of LVC. This has made health technology assessment agencies and health care organizations widen the scope of HTR to encompass strategies to facilitate de-implementation, including involving key stakeholders in the HTR process and taking actions to support de-implementation. Despite these efforts, there can still be resistance to de-implementation of LVC in passive forms, involving continued use of the practice and more active resistance such as continued funding and opinion-making opposing de-implementation. Knowledge from implementation and de-implementation research can offer guidance in how to support the execution phase of HTR.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.