The Society for Implementation Research Collaboration Instrument Review Project: a methodology to promote rigorous evaluation.

dc.contributor.author

Lewis, Cara C

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Stanick, Cameo F

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Martinez, Ruben G

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Weiner, Bryan J

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Kim, Mimi

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Barwick, Melanie

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Comtois, Katherine A

dc.date.accessioned

2024-04-01T14:58:03Z

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2024-04-01T14:58:03Z

dc.date.issued

2015-01

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Background

Identification of psychometrically strong instruments for the field of implementation science is a high priority underscored in a recent National Institutes of Health working meeting (October 2013). Existing instrument reviews are limited in scope, methods, and findings. The Society for Implementation Research Collaboration Instrument Review Project's objectives address these limitations by identifying and applying a unique methodology to conduct a systematic and comprehensive review of quantitative instruments assessing constructs delineated in two of the field's most widely used frameworks, adopt a systematic search process (using standard search strings), and engage an international team of experts to assess the full range of psychometric criteria (reliability, construct and criterion validity). Although this work focuses on implementation of psychosocial interventions in mental health and health-care settings, the methodology and results will likely be useful across a broad spectrum of settings. This effort has culminated in a centralized online open-access repository of instruments depicting graphical head-to-head comparisons of their psychometric properties. This article describes the methodology and preliminary outcomes.

Methods

The seven stages of the review, synthesis, and evaluation methodology include (1) setting the scope for the review, (2) identifying frameworks to organize and complete the review, (3) generating a search protocol for the literature review of constructs, (4) literature review of specific instruments, (5) development of an evidence-based assessment rating criteria, (6) data extraction and rating instrument quality by a task force of implementation experts to inform knowledge synthesis, and (7) the creation of a website repository.

Results

To date, this multi-faceted and collaborative search and synthesis methodology has identified over 420 instruments related to 34 constructs (total 48 including subconstructs) that are relevant to implementation science. Despite numerous constructs having greater than 20 available instruments, which implies saturation, preliminary results suggest that few instruments stem from gold standard development procedures. We anticipate identifying few high-quality, psychometrically sound instruments once our evidence-based assessment rating criteria have been applied.

Conclusions

The results of this methodology may enhance the rigor of implementation science evaluations by systematically facilitating access to psychometrically validated instruments and identifying where further instrument development is needed.
dc.identifier

10.1186/s13012-014-0193-x

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1748-5908

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1748-5908

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/30424

dc.language

eng

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Implementation science : IS

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10.1186/s13012-014-0193-x

dc.rights.uri

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

dc.subject

Humans

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Program Evaluation

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Cooperative Behavior

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Psychometrics

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Evidence-Based Medicine

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Research Design

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Translational Research, Biomedical

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The Society for Implementation Research Collaboration Instrument Review Project: a methodology to promote rigorous evaluation.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Kim, Mimi|0000-0002-1352-9670|0000-0003-1100-1298|0000-0003-2381-3453

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2

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1

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Family Medicine and Community Health

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Family Medicine and Community Health, Community Health

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

10

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