Testing the organizational theory of innovation implementation effectiveness in a community pharmacy medication management program: a hurdle regression analysis

Many state Medicaid programs are implementing pharmacist-led medication management programs to improve outcomes for high-risk beneficiaries. There are a limited number of studies examining implementation of these programs, making it difficult to assess why program outcomes might vary across organiza...

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Veröffentlicht in:Implementation science : IS 2018-07, Vol.13 (1), p.105-13, Article 105
Hauptverfasser: Turner, Kea, Trogdon, Justin G, Weinberger, Morris, Stover, Angela M, Ferreri, Stefanie, Farley, Joel F, Ray, Neepa, Patti, Michael, Renfro, Chelsea, Shea, Christopher M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Many state Medicaid programs are implementing pharmacist-led medication management programs to improve outcomes for high-risk beneficiaries. There are a limited number of studies examining implementation of these programs, making it difficult to assess why program outcomes might vary across organizations. To address this, we tested the applicability of the organizational theory of innovation implementation effectiveness to examine implementation of a community pharmacy Medicaid medication management program. We used a hurdle regression model to examine whether organizational determinants, such as implementation climate and innovation-values fit, were associated with effective implementation. We defined effective implementation in two ways: implementation versus non-implementation and program reach (i.e., the proportion of the target population that received the intervention). Data sources included an implementation survey administered to participating community pharmacies and administrative data. The findings suggest that implementation climate is positively and significantly associated with implementation versus non-implementation (AME = 2.65, p 
ISSN:1748-5908
1748-5908
DOI:10.1186/s13012-018-0799-5