Identifying and critiquing different approaches to developing complex interventions (INDEX study)

Abstract

Background

There is increasing recognition of the importance of carefully developing and evaluating complex interventions, the argument being that attention to these tasks will increase the chance of interventions being effective within trials, and being adopted widely in the real world. Poor intervention development may lead to wasted tax payers' money if expensive trials show that these interventions are flawed, or that effective interventions have limited impact in the real world. The MRC framework provides very broad guidance for intervention development (Craig 2008). In addition, researchers have documented a variety of approaches to intervention development such as theory-based, person-based, paradigm-based, and evidence-based. They have also described how to use a range of methods within intervention development e.g. qualitative methods, usability testing, evidence synthesis, causal modelling and consensus methods. However, there is no overview of the range of approaches available to researchers, which approach or combination of approaches may be most useful in what circumstances, and how the MRC framework has been operationalised. Guidance on intervention development may help researchers and research funders to make informed decisions about how to develop interventions and also help less experienced researchers build on the good practice of researchers who have this expertise.

Objectives

The aim is to produce guidance for researchers on how to develop complex interventions to improve health or health care outcomes. The objectives are to:
1. Identify and describe the different approaches taken to intervention development, the rationales for their use, and any implications for the future utility of the interventions.
2. Compare and contrast different intervention development approaches, and their methods of data collection and analysis, considering strengths and limitations overall and for different contexts.
3. Understand the history and challenges of intervention development from the perspectives of experienced researchers and wider stakeholders.
4. Measure stakeholder consensus on the key aspects of intervention development and explore the reasons for any lack of consensus.
5. Offer guidance to researchers on good practice, with examples from different approaches.

Methods

The design is a sequential mixed methods study in 3 phases.

Phase 1: A methodological review of published journal articles, book chapters, books and reports which describe and critique different approaches to intervention development in health, education and social research. Concurrently we will undertake a systematic mapping review of primary research to identify examples of different approaches to intervention development undertaken in health research 2006-2015. From these two reviews we will also identify the range of data collection, analysis and decision making methods used across all approaches and detail strengths, limitations and challenges of each.

Phase 2: A qualitative interview study with 20-25 researchers and wider stakeholders including funding panel members, patient and public representatives, and local and national policy makers to understand the challenges of intervention development. This will start in phase 2 and continue in Phase 3. From phase 1 and early interviews we will construct a preliminary typology of approaches. For each type we will identify the rationale for selecting it, strengths and limitations, contexts best used for, and display detailed examples. We will then hold a stakeholder workshop (n=20) to discuss the preliminary typology, sampling strategy for further interviews, and preliminary items for our later consensus group.

Phase 3: Consensus group to identify core aspects of intervention development. An E-Delphi of 30 experts will be followed by a consensus implementation workshop with 30-35 different stakeholders.

Technical Summary

The aim of this study is to produce guidance for researchers on how to develop complex interventions to improve health or health care outcomes. The objectives are to: 1. Identify and describe the different approaches taken to intervention development, the rationales for their use, and any implications for the future utility of the interventions. 2. Compare and contrast different intervention development approaches, the methods of data collection and analysis they used, considering strengths and limitations overall and for different contexts. 3. Understand the history and challenges of intervention development from the perspectives of experienced researchers and wider stakeholders e.g. research funders, public and patient representatives. 4. Measure stakeholder consensus on the key aspects of intervention development and explore the reasons for any lack of consensus. 5. Offer guidance to researchers on good practice, with examples from different approaches.

The design is a sequential mixed methods study in 3 phases. In phase 1 we will undertake two systematic reviews of literature on intervention development. The first will identify expert description and critiques of different approaches and methods. The second will identify primary intervention development research to improve health or health care outcomes. In phase 2 we will identify the challenges of intervention development in a qualitative interview study, and consider with stakeholders how to bring together the learning from our data collection. In phase 3 we will undertake a consensus exercise to identify core aspects of intervention development.

Planned Impact

During our project we will engage key stakeholders. We are holding two workshops which will involve leading researchers in intervention development, and wider stakeholders including directors of funding, PPI representatives, journal editors and local and national policymakers. We will provide all these stakeholders with a summary document and links to emerging publications, which they can share with their colleagues and networks as the project progresses.

At the end of the project we will hold an Impact Event consisting of a one day conference communicating the findings to researchers, funding panel members and PPI representatives, and Research Design Services (RDS) staff. The latter group is important because clinicians often lead projects with intervention development components and approach RDS staff for methodological advice. At the event, we will present the findings of our project, and invite two experts in intervention development to discuss and challenge these findings. In the afternoon we will run parallel workshops on topics determined by the findings of our work. We ran a similar conference for our previous work on using qualitative research with trials, attended by 100 researchers from the UK and Europe. Therefore we have costed this conference for 100 attendees.

Continuous professional development is important for researchers. Conference attendance is a key part of this. The International Clinical Trials Methodology Conference would be a useful venue for education and debate about intervention development. AOC is on the Scientific Committee and will discuss the boundaries of the conference, encouraging a widening to include learning on intervention development. The MRC Methodology Hubs are important stakeholders in this research. AOC, PH and KT are members of the CONDUCT-II methodology hub and will take advantage of this to run workshops on intervention development at hub events.
 
Description education
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Influenced training of practitioners or researchers
 
Description MRC Methodology Panel
Amount £300,000 (GBP)
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2018 
End 08/2020
 
Description NIHR Partnership bid: The Yorkshire Palliative Care Research Network
Amount £150,000 (GBP)
Funding ID nihr135115 
Organisation Hull York Medical School 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2022 
 
Description Prehabilitation before cardiac surgery in the UK (CARDIAC PREHAB-UK)
Amount £150,000 (GBP)
Funding ID nihr203304 
Organisation University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust 
Sector Hospitals
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2022 
End 12/2023
 
Title guidance on intervention development 
Description Guidance on how best to do intervention development 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Researchers learning to improve approach taken to developing new interventions 
URL https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/scharr/sections/hsr/mcru/indexstudy
 
Description MRC guidance for developing and evaluating complex interventions 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The University of Glasgow is leading an extension of the MRC Guidance and INDEX is part of that initiative. We have also put in a successful bid for a research project together.
Collaborator Contribution They are leading the new initiative
Impact None as yet
Start Year 2016
 
Description Free conference, webinars and seminars 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact We did a methodology study so have disseminated to researchers, PPI, funders, journal editors using a day conference in London, a webinar with international audience, and a series of seminars in Birmingham, Leeds, London.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019