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The sustainability of healthcare innovations: a concept analysis
Author(s) -
Fleiszer Andrea R.,
Semenic Sonia E.,
Ritchie Judith A.,
Richer MarieClaire,
Denis JeanLouis
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/jan.12633
Subject(s) - cinahl , conceptualization , clarity , sustainability , knowledge management , health care , context (archaeology) , psychology , business , engineering ethics , medline , sociology , computer science , political science , engineering , geography , ecology , biochemistry , chemistry , archaeology , artificial intelligence , law , biology
Aim To report on an analysis of the concept of the sustainability of healthcare innovations. Background While there have been significant empirical, theoretical and practical contributions made towards the development and implementation of healthcare innovations, there has been less attention paid to their sustainability. Yet many desired healthcare innovations are not sustained over the long term. There is a need to increase clarity around the concept of innovation sustainability to guide the advancement of knowledge on this topic. Design Concept analysis. Data sources We included literature reviews, theoretical and empirical articles, books and grey literature obtained through database searching ( ABI / INFORM , Academic Search Complete, Business Source Complete, CINAHL , Embase, MEDLINE and Web of Science) from 1996–May 2014, reference harvesting and citation searching. Methods We examined sources according to terms and definitions, characteristics, preconditions, outcomes and boundaries to evaluate the maturity of the concept. Results This concept is partially mature. Healthcare innovation sustainability remains a multi‐dimensional, multi‐factorial notion that is used inconsistently or ambiguously and takes on different meanings at different times in different contexts. We propose a broad conceptualization that consists of three characteristics: benefits, routinization or institutionalization, and development. We also suggest that sustained innovations are influenced by a variety of preconditions or factors, which are innovation‐, context‐, leadership‐ and process‐related. Conclusion Further conceptual development is essential to continue advancing our understanding of the sustainability of healthcare innovations, especially in nursing where this topic remains largely unexplored.