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                                    General discussion1937effectiveness of implementing new methods, policies, procedures, and laws. Moreover, to increase the potential value of these data sets, care organisations could make additional efforts to actively monitor the quality of these data. Finally, care organisations might take into account the following reflection. It is a positive development that phasing out involuntary care is now part of the Dutch legislation, monitored by a step-by-step plan which includes multi-disciplinary consultation. However, this increases the risk that care professionals might phase out involuntary care primarily because it is legally mandated. Complying with regulations for the primary purpose of following a law may potentially undermine intrinsic motivation of care professionals to improve the best possible care (Atiq, 2014; Deci & Ryan, 2008). The nuanced approach necessary for effectively reducing involuntary care, to which methods like NAF and MDET contribute, might be at risk if care organisations refer solely to the CCA as the reason why involuntary care should be reduced. This could lead to a more procedural rather than person-centred approach to reducing involuntary care, potentially diminishing the impact of methods like NAF and MDET that aim to foster a deeper understanding and commitment to reducing involuntary care to improve clients%u2019 well-being.General ConclusionThis dissertation contributes to a better understanding of implementation processes in organisations that provide long-term care to people with intellectual disabilities and challenging behaviour, specifically concerning methods that aim to reduce involuntary care. The exchange of tacit knowledge and prior experiences of care professionals and experts-byexperience revealed implementation barriers, facilitators, and potential strategies specific for this care sector. Moreover, this dissertation showed that a broadly accepted implementation theory in general healthcare, Normalisation Process Theory (NPT), can also be applied in long-term intellectual disability care, even though this care sector has its own care structure and challenges. Applying NPT deepened the understanding of 
                                
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