Abstract

BackgroundChampions frequently facilitate change in healthcare, but the literature lacks specificity regarding champion activities and interactions with local contexts. The Veterans' Health Administration (VA) Emergency Department (ED) Rapid Access Clinic (ED-RAC) initiative used champions to spread an innovation aimed at achieving timely specialty follow-up care for ED patients. We assessed the roles champions and local contexts played in successful ED-RAC spread in the initiative's first year. MethodsOur mixed method formative evaluation included serial questionnaires, fieldnotes from meetings, and champion interviews. We analyzed qualitative data from spread site rapid and non-rapid implementers, assessing champion and contextual factors. ResultsAmong 24 participating VA sites, 11 were rapid implementers (i.e., implemented ED-RAC in first year), 13 were not. Site champions at rapid sites described crossing multiple organizational units to get tasks accomplished (e.g., gaining buy-in, requesting resources); champions at non-rapid sites experienced inter-departmental communication challenges and competing demands. Champions at rapid and non-rapid sites encountered similar context-related barriers (e.g. scheduling complexities) and facilitators (e.g. enthusiastic buy-in), but differed in leadership and resource barriers. ConclusionsIdentifying site champions was not enough to assure rapid innovation spread. Interdependencies between ED-RAC implementation requirements (e.g., boundary spanning, resources) and champion and contextual factors helped explain variations in progress. ImplicationsTailoring spread support to champion and contextual factors may facilitate more rapid spread of innovations.

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