Complex inner and outer setting interactions determine feasibility and readiness of developing primary care registries in small island developing states: sequential mixed methods study
Natasha P. Sobers, Joeleita Agard, Jacqueline Campbell, Kia Lewis, S. M. Jeyaseelan

TL;DR
This study explores the challenges and opportunities for developing health registries in small island developing states, focusing on factors like infrastructure and funding.
Contribution
The study introduces a systems archetype to synthesize mixed methods findings on registry readiness in small island developing states.
Findings
Diabetes and hypertension were identified as top priorities for registry development.
Lack of human resources and poor infrastructure are major barriers to registry implementation.
External pressure and data protection laws are potential facilitators for registry success.
Abstract
We assessed feasibility and readiness for registry development and sought to understand the factors likely to affect the implementation of a registry into health systems in small island developing states (SIDS). We conducted online quantitative surveys and focus groups among health managers in four SIDS. Both survey and focus group guides were developed primarily based on four domains (inner setting, outer setting, individual characteristics and implementation process) of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Focus groups within each of four territories were recorded, transcribed verbatim and analyzed using thematic content analysis using a deductively derived coding framework. We synthesized our findings using a systems archetype informed by the common themes emerging from the dual methods. From the 37 respondents of the online survey, 40% and 16% identified…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Policy Implementation Science · Primary Care and Health Outcomes · Global Public Health Policies and Epidemiology
