Abstract

BackgroundDespite strong evidence giving guidance for effective fall prevention interventions in community-residing older people, there is currently no clear model for engaging general medical practitioners in fall prevention and routine use of allied health professionals in fall prevention has been slow, limiting widespread dissemination. This protocol paper outlines an implementation-effectiveness study of the Integrated Solutions for Sustainable Fall Prevention (iSOLVE) intervention which has developed integrated processes and pathways to identify older people at risk of falls and engage a whole of primary care approach to fall prevention.Methods/designThis protocol paper presents the iSOLVE implementation processes and change strategies and outlines the study design of a blended type 2 hybrid design. The study consists of a two-arm cluster randomized controlled trial in 28 general practices and recruiting 560 patients in Sydney, Australia, to evaluate effectiveness of the iSOLVE intervention in changing general practitioner fall management practices and reducing patient falls and the cost effectiveness from a healthcare funder perspective. Secondary outcomes include change in medications known to increase fall risk. We will simultaneously conduct a multi-methodology evaluation to investigate the workability and utility of the implementation intervention. The implementation evaluation includes in-depth interviews and surveys with general practitioners and allied health professionals to explore acceptability and uptake of the intervention, the coherence of the proposed changes for those in the work setting, and how to facilitate the collective action needed to implement changes in practice; social network mapping will explore professional relationships and influences on referral patterns; and, a survey of GPs in the geographical intervention zone will test diffusion of evidence-based fall prevention practices. The project works in partnership with a primary care health network, state fall prevention leaders, and a community of practice of fall prevention advocates.DiscussionThe design is aimed at providing clear direction for sustainability and informing decisions about generalization of the iSOLVE intervention processes and change strategies. While challenges exist in hybrid designs, there is a potential for significant outcomes as the iSOLVE pathways project brings together practice and research to collectively solve a major national problem with implications for policy service delivery.Trial registrationAustralian New Zealand Clinial Trials Registry ACTRN12615000401550

Highlights

  • Despite strong evidence giving guidance for effective fall prevention interventions in communityresiding older people, there is currently no clear model for engaging general medical practitioners in fall prevention and routine use of allied health professionals in fall prevention has been slow, limiting widespread dissemination

  • The design is aimed at providing clear direction for sustainability and informing decisions about generalization of the Integrated Solutions for Sustainable Fall Prevention (iSOLVE) intervention processes and change strategies

  • While challenges exist in hybrid designs, there is a potential for significant outcomes as the iSOLVE pathways project brings together practice and research to collectively solve a major national problem with implications for policy service delivery

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Summary

Discussion

The fundamental goal of this research project is to achieve dissemination and planned sustainability of an applied model of delivery integrated processes and pathways to identify older people at risk of falls and engage a whole of primary care approach to fall prevention. Our expectation is that the qualitative analysis approach using Normalization Process Theory will give the necessary depth of understanding to the contextual issues related to implementation and sustainability This should enable us to place appropriate emphasis on the lessons we will learn, what the key drivers for change are and what can be generalized, or what will need further research. The project outcomes will be a multi-disciplinary pathway model for fall prevention that will have been tested empirically in an urban area It will provide evidence of resource need and allocation, and feasible processes and guidelines for fall identification and prevention in general practice and community-based healthcare practices. Partnerships with regional, state, and professional organizations provide opportunities for widespread dissemination, leadership, and diffusion

Background
Individual face-to-face training sessions
GP computer systems
Fall or fall risk alert to GP
GP managing patient fall risk
Identifying eligible older people
Medication reviews
Evidence-based interactive fall prevention workshops
Active planning for fall prevention implementation and sustainability
Linking AHPs with GPs to facilitate referrals
Referral pathway facilitation
Links with ambulance services
Network communication strategies
Findings
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