Implementing National Strategies at the Local Level

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Implementing National Strategies at the Local Level
Success in implementing national health policies at the local level requires that resources and people are committed toward a common goal. This is an interactive process with several distinct phases and with opportunities to be influenced by decision makers at each stage. Specifically, a policy goes through the phases of formulation, implementation, evaluation, and modification (Abood, 2007). At each point, there are risks to the project’s implementation; risk of losing funding, failure to define the scope of the project adequately, lack of clear objectives and deliverables or failure of infrastructure and support systems. Perhaps most crucial in implementing national healthcare policies at the local level is enlisting the support, buy-in and ongoing commitment of providers of care who are familiar with regional issues.
In the case study, “Introducing Evidence-Based Practice in Mental Health in North Carolina” (McLaughlin & McLaughlin, 2008), the state of North Carolina attempts to induce changes to its mental health delivery system by introducing evidence-based practices into its clinics. Their success, however, is limited in part because of lack of ownership at the local level as well as absence of understanding at the national level to support implementation of the policies. An analysis of this case study also reveals that differences exist between clinical knowledge and practice in the field of mental health versus the concept of more formal evidence-based practices as dictated by outside agents at the national level. Gaps between the evidence-based claims of a national mental health policy and how those services are implemented at the local level also become apparent.

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...y initiatives will fail if they are not supported and adapted at the local level and by the practitioners responsible for the delivery of care.

Works Cited

Abood, S. (2007). Influencing healthcare in the legislative arena. The Online Journal of Issues in Nursing. Retrieved from: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/553404_4
Evans, B., Snooks, H., Howson, H., & Davies, M. (2013). How hard can it be to include research evidence and evaluation in local health policy implementation? Results from a mixed methods study. Implementation Science, 8(1), 1-9. doi:10.1186/1748-5908-8-17
Kavey, R. (2009). Leadership commitments to improve value in healthcare: Finding common ground. Retrieved from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK52843/
McLaughlin, C. & McLaughlin, C. (2008). Health policy analysis: An interdisciplinary approach. Boston, MA: Jones and Bartlett Publishers.

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