# Building a communication and support network among quality improvement teams in nursing homes: a longitudinal study of the SCOPE trial

**Authors:** Reza Yousefi Nooraie, Qiuyuan Qin, Adrian Wagg, Whitney Berta, Carole Estabrooks

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s43058-024-00559-y · 2024-03-04

## TL;DR

This study examines how communication and collaboration networks formed among nursing home quality improvement teams over time through a trial called SCOPE.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into how network-altering activities can foster collaboration among quality improvement teams in nursing homes.

## Key findings

- Teams made significantly more new connections and strengthened existing ones over time.
- Geographic proximity and co-membership in organizational chains were important predictors of connectivity.
- Less connected teams used SCOPE to build new ties, while well-connected teams disproportionately improved connectivity.

## Abstract

We applied a longitudinal network analysis approach to assess the formation of knowledge sharing and collaboration networks among care aide-led quality improvement (QI) teams in Canadian nursing homes participating in the Safer Care for Older Persons (in residential) Environments (SCOPE) trial which aimed to support unregulated front-line staff to lead unit-based quality improvement (QI) teams in nursing homes. We hypothesized that SCOPE's communicative and participatory nature would provide opportunities for peer support, knowledge sharing, and collaboration building among teams.

Fourteen QI teams in Alberta (AB) and seventeen QI teams in British Columbia (BC) participated in the study. Communications across nursing homes occurred through a series of 4 collaborative Learning Congresses (training sessions) over a 1-year period. The senior leaders of QI teams participated in two online network surveys about the communication/collaboration between teams in their province, 1 month after the first, and 6 months later, after the fourth Learning Congress. We developed communication and collaboration network maps pertaining to three time points: before SCOPE, at 2 months, and at 9 months.

Over time, teams made significantly more new connections and strengthened existing ones, within and across regions. Geographic proximity and co-membership in organizational chains were important predictors of connectivity before and during SCOPE. Teams whose members were well connected at baseline disproportionately improved connectivity over time. On the other hand, teams that did not have prior opportunities to connect appeared to use SCOPE to build new ties.

Our findings suggest the importance of network-altering activities to the formation of collaboration networks among QI teams across nursing homes. Active strategies could be used to better connect less connected teams and facilitate collaboration among geographically proximate teams. These findings may inform the development of interventions to leverage existing networks and provide new networking opportunities to develop and sustain organizational improvements.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s43058-024-00559-y.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Persons (MESH:D010554)

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10913450/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10913450