Acceptability of healthcare interventions: an overview of reviews and development of a theoretical framework
Northampton Community College · City, University of London
Abstract
It is increasingly acknowledged that 'acceptability' should be considered when designing, evaluating and implementing healthcare interventions. However, the published literature offers little guidance on how to define or assess acceptability. The purpose of this study was to develop a multi-construct theoretical framework of acceptability of healthcare interventions that can be applied to assess prospective (i.e. anticipated) and retrospective (i.e. experienced) acceptability from the perspective of intervention delivers and recipients.
Two methods were used to select the component constructs of acceptability. 1) An overview of reviews was conducted to identify systematic reviews that claim to define, theorise or measure acceptability of healthcare interventions. 2) Principles of inductive and deductive reasoning were applied to theorise the concept of acceptability and develop a theoretical framework. Steps included (1) defining acceptability; (2) describing its properties and scope and (3) identifying component constructs and empirical indicators.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 303.53
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 78
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Nursing research
- Health informatics
- Health administration
- Medicine
- Public health
- Psychological intervention
- Health care
- Health services research