Systematic development and implementation of interventions to OPtimise Health Literacy and Access (Ophelia)

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Systematic development and implementation of interventions to OPtimise Health Literacy and Access (Ophelia). / Beauchamp, Alison; Batterham, Roy W.; Dodson, Sarity; Astbury, Brad; Elsworth, Gerald R.; McPhee, Crystal; Jacobson, Jeanine; Buchbinder, Rachelle; Osborne, Richard H.

In: BMC Public Health, Vol. 17, 230, 03.03.2017, p. 1-18.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Beauchamp, A, Batterham, RW, Dodson, S, Astbury, B, Elsworth, GR, McPhee, C, Jacobson, J, Buchbinder, R & Osborne, RH 2017, 'Systematic development and implementation of interventions to OPtimise Health Literacy and Access (Ophelia)', BMC Public Health, vol. 17, 230, pp. 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-017-4147-5

APA

Beauchamp, A., Batterham, R. W., Dodson, S., Astbury, B., Elsworth, G. R., McPhee, C., Jacobson, J., Buchbinder, R., & Osborne, R. H. (2017). Systematic development and implementation of interventions to OPtimise Health Literacy and Access (Ophelia). BMC Public Health, 17, 1-18. [230]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-017-4147-5

Vancouver

Beauchamp A, Batterham RW, Dodson S, Astbury B, Elsworth GR, McPhee C et al. Systematic development and implementation of interventions to OPtimise Health Literacy and Access (Ophelia). BMC Public Health. 2017 Mar 3;17:1-18. 230. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-017-4147-5

Author

Beauchamp, Alison ; Batterham, Roy W. ; Dodson, Sarity ; Astbury, Brad ; Elsworth, Gerald R. ; McPhee, Crystal ; Jacobson, Jeanine ; Buchbinder, Rachelle ; Osborne, Richard H. / Systematic development and implementation of interventions to OPtimise Health Literacy and Access (Ophelia). In: BMC Public Health. 2017 ; Vol. 17. pp. 1-18.

Bibtex

@article{6bd8bc180e774160bf159cf7a95948f5,
title = "Systematic development and implementation of interventions to OPtimise Health Literacy and Access (Ophelia)",
abstract = "Background: The need for healthcare strengthening to enhance equity is critical, requiring systematic approaches that focus on those experiencing lesser access and outcomes. This project developed and tested the Ophelia (OPtimising HEalth LIteracy and Access) approach for co-design of interventions to improve health literacy and equity of access. Eight principles guided this development: Outcomes focused; Equity driven, Needs diagnosis, Co-design, Driven by local wisdom, Sustainable, Responsive and Systematically applied. We report the application of the Ophelia process where proof-of-concept was defined as successful application of the principles. Methods: Nine sites were briefed on the aims of the project around health literacy, co-design and quality improvement. The sites were rural/metropolitan, small/large hospitals, community health centres or municipalities. Each site identified their own priorities for improvement; collected health literacy data using the Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) within the identified priority groups; engaged staff in co-design workshops to generate ideas for improvement; developed program-logic models; and implemented their projects using Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. Evaluation included assessment of impacts on organisations, practitioners and service users, and whether the principles were applied. Results: Sites undertook co-design workshops involving discussion of service user needs informed by HLQ (n = 813) and interview data. Sites generated between 21 and 78 intervention ideas and then planned their selected interventions through program-logic models. Sites successfully implemented interventions and refined them progressively with PDSA cycles. Interventions generally involved one of four pathways: development of clinician skills and resources for health literacy, engagement of community volunteers to disseminate health promotion messages, direct impact on consumers' health literacy, and redesign of existing services. Evidence of application of the principles was found in all sites. Conclusions: The Ophelia approach guided identification of health literacy issues at each participating site and the development and implementation of locally appropriate solutions. The eight principles provided a framework that allowed flexible application of the Ophelia approach and generation of a diverse set of interventions. Changes were observed at organisational, staff, and community member levels. The Ophelia approach can be used to generate health service improvements that enhance health outcomes and address inequity of access to healthcare.",
keywords = "Chronic disease, Health inequities, Health literacy, Health Literacy Questionnaire, Health service improvement, Healthcare access, HLQ, Ophelia",
author = "Alison Beauchamp and Batterham, {Roy W.} and Sarity Dodson and Brad Astbury and Elsworth, {Gerald R.} and Crystal McPhee and Jeanine Jacobson and Rachelle Buchbinder and Osborne, {Richard H.}",
year = "2017",
month = mar,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1186/s12889-017-4147-5",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "1--18",
journal = "BMC Public Health",
issn = "1471-2458",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Systematic development and implementation of interventions to OPtimise Health Literacy and Access (Ophelia)

AU - Beauchamp, Alison

AU - Batterham, Roy W.

AU - Dodson, Sarity

AU - Astbury, Brad

AU - Elsworth, Gerald R.

AU - McPhee, Crystal

AU - Jacobson, Jeanine

AU - Buchbinder, Rachelle

AU - Osborne, Richard H.

PY - 2017/3/3

Y1 - 2017/3/3

N2 - Background: The need for healthcare strengthening to enhance equity is critical, requiring systematic approaches that focus on those experiencing lesser access and outcomes. This project developed and tested the Ophelia (OPtimising HEalth LIteracy and Access) approach for co-design of interventions to improve health literacy and equity of access. Eight principles guided this development: Outcomes focused; Equity driven, Needs diagnosis, Co-design, Driven by local wisdom, Sustainable, Responsive and Systematically applied. We report the application of the Ophelia process where proof-of-concept was defined as successful application of the principles. Methods: Nine sites were briefed on the aims of the project around health literacy, co-design and quality improvement. The sites were rural/metropolitan, small/large hospitals, community health centres or municipalities. Each site identified their own priorities for improvement; collected health literacy data using the Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) within the identified priority groups; engaged staff in co-design workshops to generate ideas for improvement; developed program-logic models; and implemented their projects using Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. Evaluation included assessment of impacts on organisations, practitioners and service users, and whether the principles were applied. Results: Sites undertook co-design workshops involving discussion of service user needs informed by HLQ (n = 813) and interview data. Sites generated between 21 and 78 intervention ideas and then planned their selected interventions through program-logic models. Sites successfully implemented interventions and refined them progressively with PDSA cycles. Interventions generally involved one of four pathways: development of clinician skills and resources for health literacy, engagement of community volunteers to disseminate health promotion messages, direct impact on consumers' health literacy, and redesign of existing services. Evidence of application of the principles was found in all sites. Conclusions: The Ophelia approach guided identification of health literacy issues at each participating site and the development and implementation of locally appropriate solutions. The eight principles provided a framework that allowed flexible application of the Ophelia approach and generation of a diverse set of interventions. Changes were observed at organisational, staff, and community member levels. The Ophelia approach can be used to generate health service improvements that enhance health outcomes and address inequity of access to healthcare.

AB - Background: The need for healthcare strengthening to enhance equity is critical, requiring systematic approaches that focus on those experiencing lesser access and outcomes. This project developed and tested the Ophelia (OPtimising HEalth LIteracy and Access) approach for co-design of interventions to improve health literacy and equity of access. Eight principles guided this development: Outcomes focused; Equity driven, Needs diagnosis, Co-design, Driven by local wisdom, Sustainable, Responsive and Systematically applied. We report the application of the Ophelia process where proof-of-concept was defined as successful application of the principles. Methods: Nine sites were briefed on the aims of the project around health literacy, co-design and quality improvement. The sites were rural/metropolitan, small/large hospitals, community health centres or municipalities. Each site identified their own priorities for improvement; collected health literacy data using the Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) within the identified priority groups; engaged staff in co-design workshops to generate ideas for improvement; developed program-logic models; and implemented their projects using Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. Evaluation included assessment of impacts on organisations, practitioners and service users, and whether the principles were applied. Results: Sites undertook co-design workshops involving discussion of service user needs informed by HLQ (n = 813) and interview data. Sites generated between 21 and 78 intervention ideas and then planned their selected interventions through program-logic models. Sites successfully implemented interventions and refined them progressively with PDSA cycles. Interventions generally involved one of four pathways: development of clinician skills and resources for health literacy, engagement of community volunteers to disseminate health promotion messages, direct impact on consumers' health literacy, and redesign of existing services. Evidence of application of the principles was found in all sites. Conclusions: The Ophelia approach guided identification of health literacy issues at each participating site and the development and implementation of locally appropriate solutions. The eight principles provided a framework that allowed flexible application of the Ophelia approach and generation of a diverse set of interventions. Changes were observed at organisational, staff, and community member levels. The Ophelia approach can be used to generate health service improvements that enhance health outcomes and address inequity of access to healthcare.

KW - Chronic disease

KW - Health inequities

KW - Health literacy

KW - Health Literacy Questionnaire

KW - Health service improvement

KW - Healthcare access

KW - HLQ

KW - Ophelia

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85014373576&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1186/s12889-017-4147-5

DO - 10.1186/s12889-017-4147-5

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28253883

AN - SCOPUS:85014373576

VL - 17

SP - 1

EP - 18

JO - BMC Public Health

JF - BMC Public Health

SN - 1471-2458

M1 - 230

ER -

ID: 174895224