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Qualitative application of the RE-AIM/PRISM framework to an educational intervention for improving the care of persons with behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia

Implement Sci Commun. 2025 May 30;6(1):69. doi: 10.1186/s43058-025-00754-5.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: An academic detailing model has improved self-efficacy of memory clinic clinicians to identify and manage complex behavioral and psychological symptoms in persons with dementia (BPSD). The purpose of this report is to describe a systematic approach to adapting a clinician education program previously delivered in two primary care integrated memory clinics for improving the management of BPSD to also be deliverable outside a memory clinic setting, in generalist primary care clinics. The RE-AIM/PRISM implementation framework guided the approach.

METHODS: Application of the RE-AIM/PRISM framework to the academic detailing program for BPSD was mapped. Framework-guided qualitative interviews were completed with experienced (Champion) and inexperienced (Novice) program stakeholders including questions on perceived gaps in clinical care (BPSD management) and barriers and facilitators to the educational model. Inductive and deductive qualitative thematic analytic approaches were used, the latter organized by RE-AIM domains and multi-level context. Convergence or divergence in organized themes by stakeholder experience shaped examination of fit and interactions among domains, components and strategies of the model for pre-implementation adaptations planning for non-memory clinic primary care clinicians.

RESULTS: A pragmatic application of the RE-AIM/PRISM framework was completed for collecting qualitative feedback from stakeholders, identifying multi-level contextual barriers and facilitators, and planning adaptations to our clinician education program. A description of the clinician stakeholders, the approach and one example of a clinician and intervention-level theme identified across RE-AIM domains for the program, self-efficacy in the management of BPSD, and resulting planned adaptations were shared.

CONCLUSIONS: We provide a novel qualitative application of the RE-AIM/PRISM framework to inform adaptations for an intervention for primary care that incorporates feedback from both current experienced and future inexperienced program stakeholders. This approach can be used to identify multi-level contextual barriers and facilitators to reach, adoption, implementation, and effectiveness of this clinician education programs approach, academic detailing, for future primary care teams.

PMID:40448179 | DOI:10.1186/s43058-025-00754-5

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