# Application of the FRAME-IS to a Multifaceted Implementation Strategy

**Authors:** Antoinette Schoenthaler, Franze De La Calle, Elaine Leon, Masiel Garcia, Doreen Colella, Jacalyn Nay, Isaac Dapkins

PMC · DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-3931349/v1 · 2024-02-12

## TL;DR

The study shows how FRAME-IS can document changes in a complex healthcare strategy to improve hypertension care.

## Contribution

Modified FRAME-IS to document adaptations in a multifaceted implementation strategy like practice facilitation.

## Key findings

- 27 adaptations were identified, with most focused on patient eligibility and referrals.
- Half of the adaptations modified the PF strategy's context, including adding community health workers.
- Most adaptations were reactive but systematically tracked and involved the FQHC in decision-making.

## Abstract

Research demonstrates the importance of documenting adaptations to implementation strategies that support integration of evidence-based interventions into practice. While studies have utilized the FRAME-IS [Framework for Reporting Adaptations and Modifications for Implementation Strategies] to collect structured adaptation data, they are limited by a focus on discrete implementation strategies (e.g., training), which do not reflect the complexity of multifaceted strategies like practice facilitation (PF). In this paper, we apply the FRAME-IS to our trial evaluating the effectiveness of PF on implementation fidelity of an evidence-based technology-facilitated team care model for improved hypertension control within a federally qualified health center (FQHC).

Three data sources are used to document adaptations: (1) implementation committee meeting minutes, (2) narrative reports completed by practice facilitators, and (3) structured notes captured on root cause analysis and Plan-Do-Study-Act worksheets. Text was extracted from the data sources according to the FRAME-IS modules and inputted into a master matrix for content analysis by two authors; a third author conducted member checking and code validation.

We modified the FRAME-IS to include part 2 of module 2 (what is modified) to add greater detail of the modified strategy, and a numbering system to track adaptations across the modules. This resulted in identification of 27 adaptations, of which 88.9% focused on supporting practices in identifying eligible patients and referring them to the intervention. About half (52.9%) of the adaptations were made to modify the context of the PF strategy to include a group-based format, add community health workers to the strategy, and to shift the implementation target to nurses. The adaptations were often widespread (83.9%), affecting all practices within the FQHC. While most adaptations were reactive (84.6%), they resulted from a systematic process of reviewing data captured by multiple sources. All adaptations included the FQHC in the decision-making process.

With modifications, we demonstrate the ability to document our adaptation data across the FRAME-IS modules, attesting to its applicability and value for a range of implementation strategies. Based on our experiences, we recommend refinement of tracking systems to support more nimble and practical documentation of iterative, ongoing, and multifaceted adaptations.

clinicaltrials.gov
NCT03713515, Registration date: October 19, 2018

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hypertension (MESH:D006973)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10896377/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10896377