Motivational drivers for health professionals in a large quality improvement collaborative project in Brazil: a qualitative study.

Eliane Pereira da Silva, Pedro Jesus Saturno-Hernández, Marise Reis de Freitas, Zenewton André da Silva Gama
Author Information
  1. Eliane Pereira da Silva: Department of Clinical Medicine, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil. eliane.pereira@ufrn.br.
  2. Pedro Jesus Saturno-Hernández: National Institute of Public Health, Cuernavaca, Morelos, México.
  3. Marise Reis de Freitas: Department of Infectious Diseases, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil.
  4. Zenewton André da Silva Gama: Graduate Program of Collective Health, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The success of collaborative quality improvement (QI) projects in healthcare depends on the context and engagement of health teams; however, the factors that modulate teams' motivation to participate in these projects are still unclear. The objective of the current study was to explore the barriers to and facilitators of motivation; the perspective was health professionals in a large project aiming to implement evidence-based infection prevention practices in intensive care units of Brazilian hospitals.
METHODS: This qualitative study was based on content analysis of semistructured in-depth interviews held with health professionals who participated in a collaborative QI project named "Improving patient safety on a large scale in Brazil". In accordance with the principle of saturation, we selected a final sample of 12 hospitals located throughout the five regions of Brazil that have implemented QI; then, we conducted videoconference interviews with 28 health professionals from those hospitals. We encoded the interview data with NVivo software, and the interrelations among the data were assessed with the COM-B model.
RESULTS: The key barriers identified were belief that improvement increases workload, lack of knowledge about quality improvement, resistance to change, minimal involvement of physicians, lack of supplies, lack support from senior managers and work overload. The primary driver of motivation was tangible outcomes, as evidenced by a decrease in infections. Additionally, factors such as the active participation of senior managers, teamwork, learning in practice and understanding the reason for changes played significant roles in fostering motivation.
CONCLUSION: The motivation of health professionals to participate in collaborative QI projects is driven by a variety of barriers and facilitators. The interactions between the senior manager, quality improvement teams, and healthcare professionals generate attitudes that modulate motivation. Thus, these aspects should be considered during the implementation of such projects. Future research could explore the cost-effectiveness of motivational approaches.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Humans
Quality Improvement
Brazil
Motivation
Health Personnel
Qualitative Research

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0professionalsimprovementhealthmotivationqualityprojectscollaborativeQIstudybarrierslargeprojecthospitalslackseniorhealthcareteamsfactorsmodulateparticipateexplorefacilitatorsqualitativeinterviewsdatamanagersBACKGROUND:successdependscontextengagementhoweverteams'stillunclearobjectivecurrentperspectiveaimingimplementevidence-basedinfectionpreventionpracticesintensivecareunitsBrazilianMETHODS:basedcontentanalysissemistructuredin-depthheldparticipatednamed"ImprovingpatientsafetyscaleBrazil"accordanceprinciplesaturationselectedfinalsample12locatedthroughoutfiveregionsBrazilimplementedconductedvideoconference28encodedinterviewNVivosoftwareinterrelationsamongassessedCOM-BmodelRESULTS:keyidentifiedbeliefincreasesworkloadknowledgeresistancechangeminimalinvolvementphysicianssuppliessupportworkoverloadprimarydrivertangibleoutcomesevidenceddecreaseinfectionsAdditionallyactiveparticipationteamworklearningpracticeunderstandingreasonchangesplayedsignificantrolesfosteringCONCLUSION:drivenvarietyinteractionsmanagergenerateattitudesThusaspectsconsideredimplementationFutureresearchcost-effectivenessmotivationalapproachesMotivationaldriversBrazil:CollaborativeHealthHealthcareMotivationQuality

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