The NPT toolkit is here to help you think through implementation
and integration problems in health care. Whether you're
involved in technological innovations, testing complex
intervenions, or implementing and evaluating any new way of
thinking, working, or organising change in healthcare. You
can use it at any stage: from initially thinking through an idea,
to understanding outcomes.
Here's a guide to using the toolkit
There are 3 steps to using the NPT
toolkit.
Working the bars
We've simplified the constructs of Normalisation Process Theory
and created sixteen items. These represent the core variables
of the theory. You can use these items to think through your
implementation problem. Each item has three distinct
features:
- A statement that defines the NPT variable.
- A sliding bar that allows you to input information about that
variable.
- A explanation, that gives more detail about what the statement
means.
The default poistion for each bar is at the centre. This is
not neutral. With your cursor move the bar to the right,
for a positive response to the Item, and to the left for a negative
response. This does not give you a numerical score - instead it
gives a subjective assessment.
Creating a summary
When you have reached Item 16, you will see a label telling you
to 'view results'. These are presented to you as a set of
graphs. You can save them to your own computer (press the 'download
pdf' button) and then print them out. The summary is a private
document, only you will see it.
Interpreting the report
The graphs show the strength that you have assigned to
each variable. Positive responses extend further out from the
centre than negative ones. Look for areas where the responses are
closer to the centre. These may tell you that participants cannot
make sense, or have not signed up to the innovation. Perhaps
they cannot enact it in a way that works for them, or cannot assess
its effects and their value. If the responses are positive, the
opposite may be true - but read our health warning below!
Each report consists of a primary graph that represents all
16 Items, and four graphs that describe your responses to
statements, or items, that relate to each of the theory's four
constructs. These give a clearer picture of each specific area
of work that leads to the embedding of an innovation or complex
intervention.
To properly interpret this information you need to read the
sections of this website that tell you what NPT is and how it
works - and where NPT constructs are explained, and
examples are provided for each variable.
Health
Warning
This is not a scientific instrument. The bars do not
provide objective scores for each variable. Use them as heuristic
tools to think through an implementation or integration
process. Instruments to measure these variables need to be
constructed using a different set of techniques - see section on Survey
Research.
We do not collect the data you input to this tool. Only you
have access to it.