4.6 Article

Adoption of opioid-prescribing guidelines in primary care: a realist synthesis of contextual factors

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-053816

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Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health [R01DA047279]

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The adoption of guideline-concordant opioid-prescribing practices in primary care settings is influenced by contextual factors and prescriber characteristics at different levels, which operate through various mechanisms. A dynamic model is needed to understand the complexity of the relationships between contexts, mechanisms, and outcomes.
Objective As part of an effort to design an implementation strategy tailoring tool, our research group sought to understand what is known about how contextual factors and prescriber characteristics affect the adoption of guideline-concordant opioid-prescribing practices in primary care settings. Design We conducted a realist synthesis of 71 articles. Results We found that adoption is related to contextual factors at the individual, clinic, health system and environmental levels, which operate via intrapersonal, interpersonal, organisational and structural mechanisms. Conclusion A single static model cannot capture the complexity of the relationships between contexts, mechanisms and outcomes. Instead, a deeper understanding requires a dynamic model that conceptualises dusters of contextual factors and mechanisms that tend towards guideline concordance and clusters that tend toward non-concordance.

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