Abstract

BackgroundThe aging of rural populations contributes to growing numbers of people with dementia in rural areas. Despite the key role of primary healthcare in rural settings there is limited research on effective models for dementia care, or evidence on sustaining and scaling them. The purpose of this study was to identify factors influencing sustainability and scale-up of rural primary care based memory clinics from the perspective of healthcare providers involved in their design and delivery.MethodsParticipants were members of four interdisciplinary rural memory clinic teams in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. A qualitative cross-sectional and retrospective study design was conducted. Data were collected via 6 focus groups (n = 40) and 16 workgroup meetings held with teams over 1 year post-implementation (n = 100). An inductive thematic analysis was used to identify themes.ResultsEleven themes were identified (five that influenced both sustainability and scale-up, three related to sustainability, and three related to scale-up), encompassing team, organizational, and intervention-based factors. Factors that influenced both sustainability and scale-up were positive outcomes for patients and families, access to well-developed clinic processes and tools, a confident clinic leader-champion, facilitation by local facilitators and the researchers, and organizational and leadership support. Study findings revealed the importance of particular factors in the rural context, including facilitation to support team activities, a proven ready-to-use model, continuity of team members, and mentoring.ConclusionsInterdisciplinary models of dementia care are feasible in rural settings if the right conditions and supports are maintained. Team-based factors were key to sustaining and scaling the innovation.

Highlights

  • The expanding field of implementation science reflects increasing awareness that many innovative pilot programs do not achieve their full policy and programMorgan et al BMC Health Services Research 2022, 22(1):148 exacerbated by the challenges of delivering dementia services in rural settings [5,6,7]

  • The gap between evidence and practice is acute with respect to dementia care [3, 4], Morgan et al BMC Health Services Research 2022, 22(1):148 exacerbated by the challenges of delivering dementia services in rural settings [5,6,7]

  • This study addresses a gap in understanding of the factors influencing sustainability and scaling up of innovations in rural dementia care, from the perspective of team members directly involved in developing, implementing, and working in rural primary healthcare (PHC) memory clinics

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Summary

Introduction

The expanding field of implementation science reflects increasing awareness that many innovative pilot programs do not achieve their full policy and programMorgan et al BMC Health Services Research 2022, 22(1):148 exacerbated by the challenges of delivering dementia services in rural settings [5,6,7]. This paper begins to address these identified gaps by focusing on factors influencing the sustainability and scale-up of a primary healthcare innovation for dementia care in a rural setting. Views of sustainability as an end stage of the implementation process have moved toward the idea of a change process of continuous intervention improvement [10, 11]. Despite the key role of primary healthcare in rural settings there is limited research on effective models for dementia care, or evidence on sustaining and scaling them. The purpose of this study was to identify factors influencing sustainability and scale-up of rural primary care based memory clinics from the perspective of healthcare providers involved in their design and delivery

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