posted on 2014-04-02, 10:18authored byRachel Margaret McEvoy, Luciana Ballini, Susanna Maltoni, Catherine A. O'Donnell, Frances Mair, Anne E. MacFarlane
Background: There is a well-recognized need for greater use of theory to address research translational gaps.
Normalization Process Theory (NPT) provides a set of sociological tools to understand and explain the social
processes through which new or modified practices of thinking, enacting, and organizing work are implemented,
embedded, and integrated in healthcare and other organizational settings. This review of NPT offers readers the
opportunity to observe how, and in what areas, a particular theoretical approach to implementation is being used.
In this article we review the literature on NPT in order to understand what interventions NPT is being used to
analyze, how NPT is being operationalized, and the reported benefits, if any, of using NPT.
Methods: Using a framework analysis approach, we conducted a qualitative systematic review of peer-reviewed
literature using NPT. We searched 12 electronic databases and all citations linked to six key NPT development
papers. Grey literature/unpublished studies were not sought. Limitations of English language, healthcare setting and
year of publication 2006 to June 2012 were set.
Results: Twenty-nine articles met the inclusion criteria; in the main, NPT is being applied to qualitatively analyze a
diverse range of complex interventions, many beyond its original field of e-health and telehealth. The NPT
constructs have high stability across settings and, notwithstanding challenges in applying NPT in terms of
managing overlaps between constructs, there is evidence that it is a beneficial heuristic device to explain and guide
implementation processes.
Conclusions: NPT offers a generalizable framework that can be applied across contexts with opportunities for
incremental knowledge gain over time and an explicit framework for analysis, which can explain and potentially
shape implementation processes. This is the first review of NPT in use and it generates an impetus for further and
extended use of NPT. We recommend that in future NPT research, authors should explicate their rationale for
choosing NPT as their theoretical framework and, where possible, involve multiple stakeholders including service
users to enable analysis of implementation from a range of perspectives.