4.3 Article

Healthcare professional behaviour: health impact, prevalence of evidence-based behaviours, correlates and interventions

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH
Volume 38, Issue 6, Pages 766-794

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08870446.2022.2100887

Keywords

health professional behaviour; implementation science; behavioural determinants and interventions; evidence-based care; theories; models; frameworks

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Understanding and changing healthcare professional behaviors is the focus of implementation science, which aims to develop principles and approaches to address care gaps. Behavioral sciences can be applied to develop implementation strategies that support behavior change and evaluate their effectiveness.
Healthcare professional (HCP) behaviours are actions performed by individuals and teams for varying and often complex patient needs. However, gaps exist between evidence-informed care behaviours and the care provided. Implementation science seeks to develop generalizable principles and approaches to investigate and address care gaps, supporting HCP behaviour change while building a cumulative science. We highlight theory-informed approaches for defining HCP behaviour and investigating the prevalence of evidence-based care and known correlates and interventions to change professional practice. Behavioural sciences can be applied to develop implementation strategies to support HCP behaviour change and provide valid, reliable tools to evaluate these strategies. There are thousands of different behaviours performed by different HCPs across many contexts, requiring different implementation approaches. HCP behaviours can include activities related to promoting health and preventing illness, assessing and diagnosing illnesses, providing treatments, managing health conditions, managing the healthcare system and building therapeutic alliances. The key challenge is optimising behaviour change interventions that address barriers to and enablers of recommended practice. HCP behaviours may be determined by, but not limited to, Knowledge, Social influences, Intention, Emotions and Goals. Understanding HCP behaviour change is a critical to ensuring advances in health psychology are applied to maximize population health.

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