Abstract

BackgroundFacilitation is a powerful approach to support practice change. The purpose of this study is to better understand the facilitation roles exercised by both external facilitators and interprofessional facilitation teams to foster the implementation of change. Building on Dogherty et al.’s taxonomy of facilitation activities, this study uses an organizational development lens to identify and analyze facilitation roles. It includes a concise definition of what interprofessional facilitation teams actually do, thus expanding our limited knowledge of teams that act as change agents. We also investigate the facilitation dynamics between change actors.MethodsWe carried out a qualitative analysis of a 1-year process of practice change implementation. We studied four family medicine groups, in which we constituted interprofessional facilitation teams. Each team was supported by one external facilitator and included at least one family physician, one case manager nurse, and health professionals located on or off the family medicine group’s site (one pharmacist, plus at least one nutritionist, kinesiologist, or psychologist). We collected our data through focus group interviews with the four teams, individual interviews with the two external facilitators, and case audit documentation. We analyzed both predetermined (as per Dogherty et al., 2012) and emerging facilitation roles, as well as facilitation dynamics.ResultsA non-linear framework of facilitation roles emerged from our data, based on four fields of expertise: change management, project management, meeting management, and group/interpersonal dynamics. We identified 72 facilitation roles, grouped into two categories: “implementation-oriented” and “support-oriented.” Each category was subdivided into themes (n = 6; n = 5) for clearer understanding (e.g., legitimation of change/project, management of effective meetings). Finally, an examination of facilitation dynamics revealed eight relational ties occurring within and/or between groups of actors.ConclusionsFacilitation is an approach used by appointed individuals, which teams can also foster, to build capacity and support practice change. Increased understanding of facilitation roles constitutes an asset in training practitioners such as organizational development experts, consultants, facilitators, and facilitation teams. It also helps decision makers become aware of the multiple roles and dynamics involved and the key competencies needed to recruit facilitators and members of interprofessional facilitation teams.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13012-016-0458-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Facilitation is a powerful approach to support practice change

  • A framework of facilitation roles by fields of expertise: objective #1 interprofessional facilitation team (IFT) saw facilitation as being mainly related to meeting management, guidance towards objectives, and support, facilitation roles encompassed a broad spectrum of other activities

  • We identified a total of 72 facilitation roles undertaken by external facilitator (EF) and/or IFTs during the implementation of Transforming Interprofessional Cardiovascular Prevention in Primary Care (TRANSIT), which we have organized into a new framework of facilitation roles

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Summary

Introduction

Facilitation is a powerful approach to support practice change. The purpose of this study is to better understand the facilitation roles exercised by both external facilitators and interprofessional facilitation teams to foster the implementation of change. Building on Dogherty et al.’s taxonomy of facilitation activities, this study uses an organizational development lens to identify and analyze facilitation roles. It includes a concise definition of what interprofessional facilitation teams do, expanding our limited knowledge of teams that act as change agents. Facilitation constitutes one of many implementation approaches used to support change within organizations. Based on literature and interviews with local and external facilitators following the implementation of evidence-based practice in nursing, they propose a taxonomy that includes 51 facilitation activities divided into 11 groupings, assigned to what the authors call the four stages of facilitation: planning for change, leading and managing change, monitoring progress and ongoing implementation, and evaluating change (see Additional file 1: Facilitation activities performed by appointed facilitators, by Dogherty et al, 2012)

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