The dynamic influence of human resources on evidence-based intervention sustainability and population outcomes: an agent-based modeling approach
Authored by Virginia R McKay, Lee D Hoffer, Todd B Combs, M Margaret Dolcini
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1186/s13012-018-0767-0
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://static-content.springer.com/esm/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13012-018-0767-0/MediaObjects/13012_2018_767_MOESM1_ESM.docx
Abstract
Background: Sustaining evidence-based interventions (EBIs) is an ongoing
challenge for dissemination and implementation science in public health
and social services. Characterizing the relationship among human
resource capacity within an agency and subsequent population outcomes is
an important step to improving our understanding of how EBIs are
sustained. Although human resource capacity and population outcomes are
theoretically related, examining them over time within real-world
experiments is difficult. Simulation approaches, especially agent-based
models, offer advantages that complement existing methods.
Methods: We used an agent-based model to examine the relationships among
human resources, EBI delivery, and population outcomes by simulating
provision of an EBI through a hypothetical agency and its staff. We used
data from existing studies examining a widely implemented HIV prevention
intervention to inform simulation design, calibration, and validity.
Once we developed a baseline model, we used the model as a simulated
laboratory by systematically varying three human resource variables: the
number of staff positions, the staff turnover rate, and timing in
training. We tracked the subsequent influence on EBI delivery and the
level of population risk over time to describe the overall and dynamic
relationships among these variables.
Results: Higher overall levels of human resource capacity at an agency
(more positions) led to more extensive EBI delivery over time and
lowered population risk earlier in time. In simulations representing the
typical human resource investments, substantial influences on population
risk were visible after approximately 2 years and peaked around 4 years.
Conclusions: Human resources, especially staff positions, have an
important impact on EBI sustainability and ultimately population health.
A minimum level of human resources based on the context (e.g., size of
the initial population and characteristics of the EBI) is likely needed
for an EBI to have a meaningful impact on population outcomes.
Furthermore, this model demonstrates how ABMs may be leveraged to inform
research design and assess the impact of EBI sustainability in practice.
Tags
Agent-based modeling
Sustainability
Risk
HIV prevention
systems science
Science
System
Quality
Public-health
Impact
Implementation
Conceptual-framework
Randomized controlled-trial
Care
Behaviors
Evidence-based intervention
Human
resources
Dissemination and implementation science
Organizational
capacity