Rationale: Mobile stroke units (MSUs) are increasingly being implemented to provide acute stroke care in the prehospital environment, but a comprehensive implementation evaluation has not been undertaken.
Aim: To identify successes and challenges in the pre- and initial operations of the first Australian MSU service from an interdisciplinary perspective.
Methods: Process evaluation of the Melbourne MSU with a mixed-methods design. Purposive sampling targeted key stakeholder groups. Online surveys (administered June-September 2019) and semistructured interviews (October-November 2019) explored experiences. Directed content analysis (raters' agreement 85%) and thematic analysis results are presented using the Interactive Sociotechnical Analysis framework.
Results: Participants representing executive/program operations, MSU clinicians and hospital-based clinicians completed 135 surveys and 38 interviews. Results converged, with major themes addressing successes and challenges: stakeholders, vehicle, knowledge, training/education, communication, work processes and working relationships.
Conclusions: Successes and challenges of establishing a new MSU service extend beyond technical, to include operational and social aspects across prehospital and hospital environments.
Keywords: ambulances; health services research; hospitals; implementation science; mixed methods research; mobile stroke unit; process evaluation; qualitative research; stroke.
© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.