Abstract
Whilst evidence based innovations exist for helping to address Health Care Associated Infections (HCAIs), the uptake and implementation of these is highly variable and in some cases very slow. We aimed to investigate organisational innovation adoption decisions and implementation processes in the context of Infection Prevention and Control (IPC). Here we focus on the implications of stakeholder involvement during these processes.
Highlights
Introduction / objectives Whilst evidence based innovations exist for helping to address Health Care Associated Infections (HCAIs), the uptake and implementation of these is highly variable and in some cases very slow
We aimed to investigate organisational innovation adoption decisions and implementation processes in the context of Infection Prevention and Control (IPC)
We focus on the implications of stakeholder involvement during these processes
Summary
When the user is not the chooser: stakeholder involvement in innovation adoption and implementation for addressing HCAIS. From International Conference on Prevention & Infection Control (ICPIC 2011) Geneva, Switzerland. Introduction / objectives Whilst evidence based innovations exist for helping to address Health Care Associated Infections (HCAIs), the uptake and implementation of these is highly variable and in some cases very slow. We aimed to investigate organisational innovation adoption decisions and implementation processes in the context of Infection Prevention and Control (IPC). We focus on the implications of stakeholder involvement during these processes
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