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Process Evaluations for the Scale-Up of Complex Interventions – a Scoping Review Cover

Process Evaluations for the Scale-Up of Complex Interventions – a Scoping Review

Open Access
|Nov 2024

Abstract

Introduction: Complex health interventions (CHIs) are common in (public) health and social care practice and policy. A process evaluation (PE) is an essential part of designing and testing CHIs and questions what is implemented, the mechanisms of change, and how context affects implementation. The scale-up of CHIs is challenging and heterogeneous, making the accompanying PE unique to the nature of the inquiry.

Methods: We conducted a scoping review to describe the current practice of conducting PEs alongside or following the scale-up of CHI. Eight primary data sources were searched and data extracted on study characteristics, intervention characteristics, methods used in relation to the PE, and stakeholders included.

Results: We reviewed 10,538 records and included 56 studies. Seven common thematic areas emerged in which CHIs were being scaled-up. The use of scale-up specific frameworks was rare, and common outcomes of the process evaluation focussed on barriers and facilitators in relation to the context; often obtained “once-off” using qualitative and quantitative data sources. Scale-up strategies reported were: supporting increased coverage, comprehensiveness, and institutionalisation; often simultaneously.

Conclusion: Variations in the conduct of process evaluations during the scale-up phase of complex health interventions may reflect differences in context, conceptual challenges, the multi-dimensional nature of scale-up, and the point of engagement with the health care system (e.g., community-level). Ideally, a process evaluation is a recurrent continuous process, leveraging a systems-driven understanding and triangulation of qualitative and quantitative data, that takes place alongside the scale-up project to inform real-world adaptations of scale-up strategies and (untoward) mechanisms of impact when applicable.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.7600 | Journal eISSN: 1568-4156
Language: English
Submitted on: Mar 8, 2023
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Accepted on: Oct 24, 2024
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Published on: Nov 8, 2024
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2024 Lekha Rathod, Martin Heine, Daniel Boateng, Monika Martens, Josefien van Olmen, Grace Marie Ku, Kerstin Klipstein-Grobusch, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.