Journal
ARCHIVES OF DISEASE IN CHILDHOOD
Volume 106, Issue 3, Pages 215-218Publisher
BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/archdischild-2020-318795
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The study illustrates a successful adoption and maintenance of a pediatric early warning system as a sociotechnical intervention in the UK and Ireland over 10 years. The findings suggest that iterative processes within environment, culture, policy, human action, and the wider system context are crucial for improved outcomes in small-scale implementation and meta-analyses.
The national implementation groups of early warning systems in the UK and Ireland have identified a need to understand implementation, adoption and maintenance of these complex interventions. The literature on how to implement, scale, spread and sustain these systems is sparse. We describe a successful adoption and maintenance over 10 years of a paediatric early warning system as a sociotechnical intervention using the Nonadoption, Abandonment, Challenges to the Scale-Up, Spread, and Sustainability Framework for Health and Care Technologies. The requirement for iterative processes within environment, culture, policy, human action and the wider system context may explain the possible reasons for improved outcomes in small-scale implementation and meta-analyses that are not reported in multicentre randomised control trials of early warning systems.
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