Journal of Clinical and Translational Science (Jan 2024)

Advancing and strengthening the study of social networks in community-level dissemination and implementation research: A narrative review

  • Ariella R. Korn,
  • Jennifer L. Cruz,
  • Natalie R. Smith,
  • Rebekah R. Jacob,
  • Megan Carney,
  • Wallis Slater,
  • Shoba Ramanadhan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/cts.2024.614
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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The dissemination and implementation (D&I) of evidence at the community level is critical to improve health and advance health equity. Social networks are considered essential to D&I efforts, but there lacks clarity regarding how best to study and leverage networks. We examined networks in community-level D&I frameworks to characterize the range of network actors, activities, and change approaches. We conducted a narrative review of 66 frameworks. Among frameworks that explicitly addressed networks – that is, elaborated on network characteristics, structure, and/or activities – we extracted and synthesized network concepts using descriptive statistics and narrative summaries. A total of 24 (36%) frameworks explicitly addressed networks. Commonly included actors were implementers, adopters/decision-makers, innovation developers, implementation support professionals, and innovation recipients. Network activities included the exchange of resources, knowledge, trust, and norms. Most network-explicit frameworks characterized ties within and across organizations and considered element(s) of network structure – for example, size, centrality, and density. The most common network change strategy was identifying individuals to champion D&I efforts. We discuss opportunities to expand network inquiry in D&I science, including understanding networks as implementation determinants, leveraging network change approaches as implementation strategies, and exploring network change as an implementation outcome.

Keywords