Adaptations and modifications to the 15-method in Danish general practice classified using the framework for reporting adaptations and modifications to evidence-based interventions (FRAME)
Peter Næsborg Schøler, Per Nilsen, Sanne Rasmussen, Jens Søndergaard, Anette Søgaard Nielsen

TL;DR
This study explores how Danish healthcare professionals adapted a patient-centered alcohol intervention method in general practice, identifying changes that improved patient engagement.
Contribution
The study systematically classifies adaptations to the 15-method using the FRAME framework in a Danish primary care context.
Findings
Four main modifications were identified, including structural loosening and integration into clinical procedures.
Half of the changes were unplanned, and most aimed to increase patient reach and engagement.
Training and structured follow-up were seen as important for healthcare professionals' confidence in using the method.
Abstract
Unhealthy alcohol use is a major global public health problem, yet alcohol problems often remain unaddressed in primary care. The 15-method, developed in Sweden, offers a flexible, patient-centered approach to alcohol-related issues using opportunistic screening and stepped-care treatment in the same setting. The present study describes adaptations and modifications made to the 15-method by Danish healthcare professionals during a randomized controlled trial testing the 15-method’s effectiveness in Danish general practice. Data for the present qualitative study were individual and group interviews with 28 healthcare professionals from 12 Danish general practices enrolled in the Identification and Treatment of Alcohol Problems in Primary Care (iTAPP) study, a stepped-wedge cluster randomized controlled trial. Interviews focused on innovation and implementation process determinants from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Policy Implementation Science · Primary Care and Health Outcomes · Clinical practice guidelines implementation
