Equipping community pharmacy workers as agents for health behaviour change : developing and testing a theory-based smoking cessation intervention

Autor: Chris Griffiths, Angel M. Chater, Trisha Greenhalgh, Wai-Yee James, Liz Steed, Robert Walton, Sandra Jumbe, Sandra Eldridge, Adam Todd, Elizabeth A. Edwards, Ratna Sohanpal, Carol Rivas, Fraser Macfarlane, Stephanie Taylor, Virginia Macneil
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
Adult
medicine.medical_treatment
Social Cognitive Theory
Health Behavior
Context (language use)
Pharmacy
Pilot Projects
Community Pharmacy Services
Health Promotion
Smoking cessation
Community Pharmacies
Pharmacists
law.invention
Interviews as Topic
03 medical and health sciences
Young Adult
0302 clinical medicine
Nursing
Randomized controlled trial
law
RA0421
Intervention (counseling)
Self Determination Theory
London
medicine
Diffusion of Innovations Theory
Humans
030212 general & internal medicine
Smoking and Tobacco
Community Health Workers
Intervention development
Health Behaviour Change
business.industry
030503 health policy & services
Research
General Medicine
Middle Aged
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Self Efficacy
Health promotion
Logistic Models
0305 other medical science
business
Social cognitive theory
Qualitative research
Zdroj: BMJ Open
BMJ open, 2017, Vol.7(8), pp.e015637 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
ISSN: 2044-6055
Popis: ObjectiveTo develop a complex intervention for community pharmacy staff to promote uptake of smoking cessation services and to increase quit rates.DesignFollowing the Medical Research Council framework, we used a mixed-methods approach to develop, pilot and then refine the intervention.MethodsPhase I: We used information from qualitative studies in pharmacies, systematic literature reviews and the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation—Behaviour framework to inform design of the initial version of the intervention.Phase II: We then tested the acceptability of this intervention with smoking cessation advisers and assessed fidelity using actors who visited pharmacies posing as smokers, in a pilot study.Phase III: We reviewed the content and associated theory underpinning our intervention, taking account of the results of the earlier studies and a realist analysis of published literature. We then confirmed a logic model describing the intended operation of the intervention and used this model to refine the intervention and associated materials.SettingEight community pharmacies in three inner east London boroughs.Participants12 Stop Smoking Advisers.InterventionTwo, 150 min, skills-based training sessions focused on communication and behaviour change skills with between session practice.ResultsThe pilot study confirmed acceptability of the intervention and showed preliminary evidence of benefit; however, organisational barriers tended to limit effective operation. The pilot data and realist review pointed to additional use of Diffusion of Innovations Theory to seat the intervention in the wider organisational context.ConclusionsWe have developed and refined an intervention to promote smoking cessation services in community pharmacies, which we now plan to evaluate in a randomised controlled trial.Trial registration numberUKCRN ID 18446, Pilot.
Databáze: OpenAIRE