TY - JOUR T1 - Facilitators and barriers to implementing quality measurement in primary mental health care JF - Canadian Family Physician JO - Can Fam Physician SP - 1322 LP - 1331 VL - 56 IS - 12 AU - Donald Addington AU - Tania Kyle AU - Soni Desai AU - JianLi Wang Y1 - 2010/12/01 UR - http://www.cfp.ca/content/56/12/1322.abstract N2 - OBJECTIVE To identify facilitators and barriers to implementing quality measurement in primary mental health care as part of a large Canadian study (Continuous Enhancement of Quality Measurement) to identify and select key performances measures for quality improvement in primary mental health care. DATA SOURCES CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO were searched, using various terms that represented the main concepts, for articles published in English between 1996 and 2005. STUDY SELECTION In consultation with a health sciences research librarian, the initial list of identified references was reduced to 702 abstracts, which were assessed for relevance by 2 coders using predetermined selection criteria. Following a consensus process, 34 articles were selected for inclusion in the analysis. An additional 106 citations were identified in the references of these articles, 14 of which were deemed relevant to this study, for a total of 57 empirical articles identified for review. Most articles described implementation of health care innovations and clinical practice guidelines, 5 focused on quality indicators, and 1 examined mental health indicators. SYNTHESIS Content analysis of the 57 articles identified 7 common categories of facilitators and barriers for implementing innovations, guidelines, and quality indicators: indicator characteristics, promotional strategies, implementation strategies, resources, individual-level factors, organizational-level factors, and external factors. Implementation studies in which these factors were addressed were more likely to achieve successful outcomes. CONCLUSION The overlap in facilitators and barriers across implementation of mental health indicators, health care innovations, and practice guidelines is not surprising, as they are often related. The overlap strengthens the findings of the limited number of studies of quality indicators. The Continuous Enhancement of Quality Measurement process for identification and selection of indicators has attended to some of these issues by using a rigorous scientific approach and by engaging a range of stakeholders in selecting and prioritizing the indicators. ER -