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The Eva-PED-t project will evaluate implementation of a new therapy for eating disorders, called PED-t (Physical Exercise and Dietary therapy), in a new treatment arena for such illnesses. By this, Eva-PED-t evaluates effectiveness- and efficacy outcomes, with the latter highlighting both the user-, the therapists- and the management perspectives. The research group behind this initiative comprises the founders of the PED-t, and holds extensive expertise on research methodology, eating disorders, health science, and exercise medicine, affiliated high-ranked research-intensive universities. Previous documentation of poor implementation of evidence-based knowledge in public health services reveal poor or no translation of new research findings for improved screening, treatment or medical procedures into real life settings. This may impair public health service outcomes, as less effective or ineffective treatment or procedures are routinely preferred. In a randomized controlled trial, the Eva-PED-t partnership recently found a new therapy for eating disorders (PED-t) to be comparable effective to the currently recommended treatment (NCT02079935). Specific advantages with PED-t, are the use of professionals not currently used in therapy of mental disorders, and the efficiency of arranging therapy in groups, hence effectively dealing with the high request for therapy. The Eva PED-t collaborative is motivated by the knowledge of high prevalence of mental illnesses, for which there is a need to improve treatment access and -efficiency. Adding to this scenario, is the new and more prevalent diagnosis of eating disorders, binge eating disorder, for which specialized health services have no prioritization for treatment. Addressing requirements for improved therapy access demands investigation of new treatments and new ways of delivery. The PED-t responds to this request, still recommendation for a broad implementation necessitate exploration of implementation strategies and experiences.
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Implementation research intends to identify facilitating and obstructing elements in the process of transferring evidence-based practices from controlled settings to naturalistic settings. Unfortunately, the implementation of evidence-based knowledge is challenged by lack of institutional resources and insufficient prioritization by the management, and lack of prioritization by funders and academic researchers. As such, a lag time before evidence-based knowledge from research is translated in to real world practice is typically estimated to be about 14-20 years. The delay in implementation of evidence-based practice is found to be specifically relevant in health care services, hence, ultimately depriving patients from best practice. Exercise referral centers (ERC, also known as Healthy Living Centers) are part of the municipally public health care, providing support for improved healthy living behavior. Service users are confident by the professional skills in the ERC, and trust the service to be evidence-based. However, there are a wide variety in program approaches and methodology, most with no evidence-based foundation, and a lack of documentation on effects. Hence originally, the UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) recommended not to commission ERC in primary health care other than in well-designed research studies. The ERC's are in an early progress, still exploring their role in public health care and having stakeholders requesting evidence-based methods, and as such, identification of successful interventions at the ERC's is necessitated.
The Eva-PED-t has the potential to pick up on the shortfalls in documentation of effectiveness outcomes and exploration of efficacy of evidence-based interventions at the ERC's, and the poor implementation of evidence-based treatment in public health services in general. The EVA_PED intend to evaluate the implementation of the PED-t in the public health care services ERC in terms of effectiveness and efficacy, and by a mixed methods design. By relying on the original team behind the development of the PED-t to train the therapists, inform and supervise the management, and to provide support during implementation, this project has the potential to ease the implementation process. As such, the EVA-PED aim to follow the request to evaluate the total implementation success (i.e. the sum of the effectiveness of treatment and the experiences of implementation within the organization).
The researchers behind the EVA-PED finalized the evaluation of effectivity from PED-t on treatment of eating disorders in 2018 (NCT02079935), bringing optimism on increased therapy access, lowering barriers for treatment seeking behavior, and facilitating a more effective treatment delivery. Having the PED-t research team initiating Eva-PED-t, this project will bypass the delay in translation of evidence-based knowledge to real life settings. The Eva-PED-t has the potential to identify any elements undermining optimal uptake of this evidence-based treatment in public health services. Informed on previous challenges on successful implementation of evidence-based procedures, Eva-PED-t grasp on these most critical elements. Providing practical training and adequate time for preparations, mentoring during therapy operation, relying on therapy elements similar to what the therapists have practiced in their regular work, and by communicating, involving and motivating several levels in the organizations (management and therapists); the EVA_PED target the most critical elements previously found to impair successful implementation. Additionally, by involving former patients and therapists from the PED-t intervention as user groups, combined with the findings from in depth interviews in the corresponding groups of patients and therapists, the EVA-PED will evaluate adjustments of the therapy and arrangement according to their experiences and advices.
The EVA-PED-t project aims to evaluate the success of adopting and operating the evidence-based PED-t in naturalistic settings like ERC's, physiotherapy clinics and multidisciplinary medical centers. By this, the project intends to study effectiveness outcomes and efficacy outcomes, with the latter highlighting both the user perspectives, the therapists- and the management perspectives. A part of the efficacy outcomes, is evaluation on the treatment fidelity by individual therapists.
This generate the following main- and secondary research questions (RQ):
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Secondary RQ's:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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