The What, the When and the How: A qualitative review of allied health
decision-maker perspectives on factors influencing the development and
implementation of advanced and extended scopes of practice
Abstract
Abstract Background: Health workforce supply is critical
to ensuring the delivery of essential healthcare, and may be enhanced
via mechanisms which alter the scopes of practice of health professions.
The aim of this paper is to study the collective perspectives of allied
health decision-makers on factors which influence their development and
implementation of advanced and extended scope of practice initiatives,
and the timing/catalyst and application of their decision-making.
Methods: A grounded-theory, qualitative study of the experiences
of allied health directors and senior managers across two Australian
jurisdictions. Results: Twenty allied health decision-makers met
study eligibility criteria. Data coding of interview transcripts
identified 14 factors specific to scope of practice change, spanning
rational (n=8) and non-rational (n=6) decision-making approaches.
Leadership, Governance, Organisational need,
Resourcing, Knowledge & Skills – clinical,
Supporting resources, Knowledge & skills – change and
Sustainability were identified as being rational and enabling in
and of themselves, with Leadership seen as being most
influential. Comparatively, the non-rational factors of
Socio-economic & political environment, Perceived patient
need, Organisational environment, Change culture &
appetite, Perceived professional territorialism and Actual
professional territorialism were more varied, and primarily influenced
the timing/catalyst and application of decision-making.
Conclusion : Allied health decision-makers hold a complex,
systems-level understanding of scope of practice change. Whilst rational
decision criteria were predominant and seen to enable scope change,
non-rational influences reflected greater variation in decision
timing/catalyst and application, thus emphasising the human dimensions
of decision-making. Further research is required to better understand
how decision-makers integrate and weight decision-making factors to
inform the development of structured decision tools.