Abstract

BackgroundDespite high quality evidence supporting multiple physical and cognitive benefits of community-based exercise for people after stroke, there is little understanding on how to facilitate uptake of these research findings to real-world programs. A common barrier is a lack of standardised training for community fitness instructors, which hampers the ability to train more instructors to deliver the program as it was designed. Scaling up program delivery, while maintaining program fidelity, is complex. The objective of this research is to explore novel use of the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDier) framework to evaluate and support implementation fidelity of a community exercise program.MethodsWe embedded intervention fidelity evaluation into an inaugural training program for fitness instructors who were to deliver the Fitness and Mobility Exercise Program for stroke, which has established efficacy. The training program consisted of a face-to-face workshop followed by 3 worksite ‘audit and feedback coaching cycles’ provided over 3 iterations of the 12-week program offered over 1 year. A modified TIDIER checklist (with 2 additional criteria) was used within the training workshop to clarify the key ‘active ingredients’ that were required for program fidelity, and secondly as a basis for the audit and feedback process enabling the quantitative measurement of fidelity. Data were collected from audits of observed classes and from a survey provided by fitness instructors who implemented the program.ResultsWe demonstrated the feasibility of the TIDier checklist to capture 14 essential items for implementation evaluation of a complex exercise intervention for people with chronic health conditions over 3 iterations of the program. Based on the audit tool, program fidelity was high and improved over time. Three content areas for workplace coaching (intensity monitoring, space, and educational tips) were identified from the audit tool and were addressed.ConclusionTraining of staff to deliver exercises to high need populations utilising workshops and workplace coaching that used the TIDier framework for training, onsite audit and feedback resulted in a high level of fidelity to the program principles. A novel checklist based on the TIDier framework was useful for embedding implementation fidelity in complex community-based interventions.

Highlights

  • Despite high quality evidence supporting multiple physical and cognitive benefits of communitybased exercise for people after stroke, there is little understanding on how to facilitate uptake of these research findings to real-world programs

  • There is a natural tension between the goal of implementation fidelity (i.e., ‘the degree to which programs are implemented as intended by the program developers’ [5]) and the need for local contextualisation [7]

  • The objective of this research is to evaluate implementation fidelity of a complex multi-component community-based exercise program using a framework adapted from the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDier) checklist that we embedded in a training program built on the TIDier framework when we ran it for the first time

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Summary

Introduction

Despite high quality evidence supporting multiple physical and cognitive benefits of communitybased exercise for people after stroke, there is little understanding on how to facilitate uptake of these research findings to real-world programs. While there is good quality evidence and guidelines supporting community-based exercise to improve physical and cognitive functioning in people with stroke [1], there is little understanding on how to move these programs from research to real-world programs [2]. The lack of ability to standardise the delivery and evaluation of complex health interventions can arise in barriers to implementation [4] and jeopardize the effectiveness of the interventions when delivered in a ‘real life’ setting. Program developers and implementers must be very clear about the ‘active ingredients’ that are the essential elements that a newly established program must include for that program to be considered implemented with fidelity to the original [8]

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