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result(s) for
"Norsigian, Judy"
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Investigation of factors influencing the implementation of two shared decision-making interventions in contraceptive care: a qualitative interview study among clinical and administrative staff
2019
Background
There is limited evidence on how to implement shared decision-making (SDM) interventions in routine practice. We conducted a qualitative study, embedded within a 2 × 2 factorial cluster randomized controlled trial, to assess the acceptability and feasibility of two interventions for facilitating SDM about contraceptive methods in primary care and family planning clinics. The two SDM interventions comprised a patient-targeted intervention (video and prompt card) and a provider-targeted intervention (encounter decision aids and training).
Methods
Participants were clinical and administrative staff aged 18 years or older who worked in one of the 12 clinics in the intervention arm, had email access, and consented to being audio-recorded. Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted upon completion of the trial. Audio recordings were transcribed verbatim. Data collection and thematic analysis were informed by the 14 domains of the Theoretical Domains Framework, which are relevant to the successful implementation of provider behaviour change interventions.
Results
Interviews (
n
= 29) indicated that the interventions were not systematically implemented in the majority of clinics. Participants felt the interventions were aligned with their role and they had confidence in their skills to use the decision aids. However, the novelty of the interventions, especially a need to modify workflows and change behavior to use them with patients, were implementation challenges. The interventions were not deeply embedded in clinic routines and their use was threatened by lack of understanding of their purpose and effect, and staff absence or turnover. Participants from clinics that had an enthusiastic study champion or team-based organizational culture found these social supports had a positive role in implementing the interventions.
Conclusions
Variation in capabilities and motivation among clinical and administrative staff, coupled with inconsistent use of the interventions in routine workflow contributed to suboptimal implementation of the interventions. Future trials may benefit by using implementation strategies that embed SDM in the organizational culture of clinical settings.
Journal Article
Our Bodies Ourselves and the Women’s Health Movement in the United States: Some Reflections
2019
As a cofounder and past executive director of Our Bodies Ourselves (OBOS), formerly known as the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, Inc., I offer a few reflections on the influence of second-wave feminism on health policy.
Journal Article
Estrogen Implants: Embodiments of Deeper Problems in the Marketing of Drugs
by
Schiff, Gordon
,
Norsigian, Judy
in
Conflict of Interest
,
Drug Implants - adverse effects
,
Drug Industry
2010
Uncertainties and controversies over the optimal role and formulations for exogenous estrogen continue. These controversies have been fueled by a small number of authors who wrote multiple pro-estrogen articles while often failing to disclose financial ties with estrogen manufacturers.
Journal Article
Control the bonanza for research eggs
by
Fogel, Susan Berke
,
Darnovsky, Marcy
,
Norsigian, Judy
in
Egg (Biology)
,
Hormones
,
Ovarian cancer
2011
Journal Article
Cloning technology: Control the bonanza for research eggs
by
Fogel, Susan Berke
,
Darnovsky, Marcy
,
Norsigian, Judy
in
Cellular Reprogramming
,
Female
,
Humans
2011
Journal Article
Control the bonanza for research eggs
by
Fogel, Susan Berke
,
Norsigian, Judy
,
Darnovsky, Marcy
in
631/61/17/1998
,
692/700/228
,
706/648/179
2011
Journal Article
Right For Me: protocol for a cluster randomised trial of two interventions for facilitating shared decision-making about contraceptive methods
2017
IntroductionDespite the observed and theoretical advantages of shared decision-making in a range of clinical contexts, including contraceptive care, there remains a paucity of evidence on how to facilitate its adoption. This paper describes the protocol for a study to assess the comparative effectiveness of patient-targeted and provider-targeted interventions for facilitating shared decision-making about contraceptive methods.Methods and analysisWe will conduct a 2×2 factorial cluster randomised controlled trial with four arms: (1) video+prompt card, (2) decision aids+training, (3) video+prompt card and decision aids+training and (4) usual care. The clusters will be clinics in USA that deliver contraceptive care. The participants will be people who have completed a healthcare visit at a participating clinic, were assigned female sex at birth, are aged 15–49 years, are able to read and write English or Spanish and have not previously participated in the study. The primary outcome will be shared decision-making about contraceptive methods. Secondary outcomes will be the occurrence of a conversation about contraception in the healthcare visit, satisfaction with the conversation about contraception, intended contraceptive method(s), intention to use a highly effective method, values concordance of the intended method(s), decision regret, contraceptive method(s) used, use of a highly effective method, use of the intended method(s), adherence, satisfaction with the method(s) used, unintended pregnancy and unwelcome pregnancy. We will collect study data via longitudinal patient surveys administered immediately after the healthcare visit, four weeks later and six months later.Ethics and disseminationWe will disseminate results via presentations at scientific and professional conferences, papers published in peer-reviewed, open-access journals and scientific and lay reports. We will also make an anonymised copy of the final participant-level dataset available to others for research purposes.Trial registration numberClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02759939.
Journal Article
Women
2013
This chapter discusses several major issues of social injustice as they adversely affect the health and wellbeing of women. Sections of the chapter address gender equity, family planning and related issues, abortion, infertility and assisted reproduction, HIV/AIDS, war and other forms of violence, forced migration, aging, and climate change. The final section of the chapter addresses what needs to be done to address these issues. A textbox describes Our Bodies Ourselves, a nongovernmental organization that has for many years addressed social injustice issues as they adversely affect women. Another textbox describes the importance of engaging men in preventing genderbased violence.
Book Chapter