Data

Data from: Testing a systematic approach to identify and prioritise barriers to successful implementation of a complex healthcare intervention

RMIT University, Australia
Leonid Churilov (Aggregated by)
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=https://figshare.com/collections/Testing_a_systematic_approach_to_identify_and_prioritise_barriers_to_successful_implementation_of_a_complex_healthcare_intervention/3685258&rft.title=Data from: Testing a systematic approach to identify and prioritise barriers to successful implementation of a complex healthcare intervention&rft.identifier=10e124cc4e0b6bc099a104b02a7ea79d&rft.publisher=RMIT University, Australia&rft.description=Attached file provides supplementary data for linked article. This is the paper version of online questionnaire. Copy of paper based study questionnaire used for online survey. A survey was developed based on a literature review and data from a complementary trial to identify the commonly reported barriers for the nine T3 clinical care elements. This was administered via a web-based questionnaire to a purposive sample of Australian multidisciplinary clinicians and managers in acute stroke care. The questionnaire addressed barriers to each of the nine T3 trial clinical care elements. Participants produced two ranked lists: on their perception of: firstly, how influential each barrier was in preventing clinicians from performing the clinical care element (influence attribute); and secondly how difficult the barrier was to overcome (difficulty attribute). The rankings for both influence and difficulty were combined to classify the barriers according to three categories (‘least desirable’, desirable’ or ‘most desirable’ to target) to assist interpretation.&rft.creator=Leonid Churilov&rft.date=2018&rft.relation=https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12874-017-0298-4&rft_rights=All rights reserved&rft_rights=CC BY-NC: Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 AU http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/au&rft_subject=Acute stroke care&rft_subject=Barriers&rft_subject=Implementation&rft_subject=Prioritisation&rft_subject=Randomized controlled trial&rft_subject=Swallowing dysfunction&rft_subject=Treatment protocols&rft_subject=Hyperglycemia&rft_subject=Public Health and Health Services not elsewhere classified&rft_subject=MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES&rft_subject=PUBLIC HEALTH AND HEALTH SERVICES&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Attached file provides supplementary data for linked article. This is the paper version of online questionnaire. Copy of paper based study questionnaire used for online survey. A survey was developed based on a literature review and data from a complementary trial to identify the commonly reported barriers for the nine T3 clinical care elements. This was administered via a web-based questionnaire to a purposive sample of Australian multidisciplinary clinicians and managers in acute stroke care. The questionnaire addressed barriers to each of the nine T3 trial clinical care elements. Participants produced two ranked lists: on their perception of: firstly, how influential each barrier was in preventing clinicians from performing the clinical care element (influence attribute); and secondly how difficult the barrier was to overcome (difficulty attribute). The rankings for both influence and difficulty were combined to classify the barriers according to three categories (‘least desirable’, desirable’ or ‘most desirable’ to target) to assist interpretation.

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  • Local : 10e124cc4e0b6bc099a104b02a7ea79d