Title: PBRNs and ACTION: Accelerating the Implementation of Evidence-Based Healthcare
1PBRNs and ACTIONAccelerating the
Implementationof Evidence-Based Healthcare
- David Lanier, MD
- CP3
- Cynthia Palmer, MSc
- CDOM
2AHRQ Mission
- To improve the quality, safety, efficiency
- and effectiveness of healthcare
- for all Americans
3Increased emphasis on implementing evidence-based
healthcare
Translation
Scientific Evidence
Understandable and Usable Information
4Challenges
- Passive diffusion/implementation of evidence
takes too long - Lengthy time requirements of funding through
traditional grant mechanisms - Historical delays in passage of annual
Congressional appropriations - Traditional (AHC) research settings not ideally
suited for implementation/translational work
5Ecology of Medical Care Updated Green, Yawn,
Lanier. N Engl J Med 20013442021-25
6New Funding Mechanism Required
- Easy access to healthcare sites where most
Americans receive care - Targeted activities related to implementation of
research evidence into practice - Shorten the cycle of soliciting and funding
projects - Include funding for dissemination and spread of
project findings
7Master Task Order Contracts
- Identify/define groups eligible to carry out
rapid turn-around task orders - Award master contracts through open competition
- Awardees are pre-qualified to compete for
specific task order work - Each master contractor assured of being awarded
at least one task order over life of contract
8Task Orders
- Master contractor reports interests/strengths of
network - AHRQ defines the work to be done and the
timeframe for completion (RFTO) - Funding (ranging from 150,000 to gt2 million)
from AHRQ and/or our Federal (e.g., CDC) or
private (e.g. RWJF) partners - Master contractors usually have lt6 wks to respond
to RFTO - Responses peer-reviewed and award(s) made within
3-6 wks - Typical task order completed within 6-30 mos
9Two Master Contractor Programs Established
- Practice-Based Research Networks (PBRNs)
networks composed of smaller (1-20 clinician)
community-based primary care practices - Accelerating Change and Transformation in
Organizations and Networks (ACTION) composed of
hospital systems, health plans, long-term care,
other care-delivery systems
10PBRNs
- Groups of ambulatory practices devoted
- principally to the primary care of patients,
- affiliated with each other and academic
- researchers in order to investigate
- questions related to community-based
- practice and to improve the quality of
- primary care.
11Primary Care PBRNs
- Real-world primary care practices
- Clinicians include all primary care specialties
(family medicine, general internal medicine,
pediatrics, family nurse practitioners) - Work with academic researchers to answer
questions related to primary care practice or the
delivery of primary care services - Laboratories for effectiveness studies in office
settings with competing demands for high quality
care and greater efficiency/productivity - Depend upon outside funding (grants, contracts)
to support their work
12Capacity
- 28 PBRNs identified in 1994
- 177 PBRNs identified in 2005
- Headquartered in urban, suburban and rural areas
- 2,724 practices are affiliated with PBRNs located
in all 50 states and Puerto Rico - 16 million patients are affiliated with PBRNs
- Average of 198,112 patients per PBRN (range 1200
to 2.7 million)
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14Why Is Primary Care Important to AHRQ?
- Majority of daily patient/clinician interactions
occur in ambulatory settings - Majority of prescriptions for medications written
in ambulatory settings - While growth of HMOs and large integrated
healthcare systems has been dramatic, gt50 of
Americans still receive primary care services in
smaller (3-10 clinician) practices - Significant amount of care in these settings
flies under radar of most national quality
monitoring efforts
15Consortia of Networks
- North Carolina Network Consortium (NCNC) UNC,
Duke, Adolescent Research, Mecklenburg, Robeson
County - PRIME Net RIOSNet, CaReNet, SERCN, SPUR-Net,
CRN - SNOCAP High Plains, CaReNet, BIGHORN, AAFP-NRN
- ePCRN Consortium MAFPRN, AAFP-NRN, Alabama, LA
Net, OKPRN, Penn State, STARNet, South Florida,
Buffalo
16Individual Networks
- ACORN (Virginia Commonwealth)
- Irene (Iowa)
- OKPRN (Oklahoma)
- ORPRN (Oregon)
- PeRC (Childrens, Philadelphia)
- PPRNet (Univ South Carolina)
17PBRN Task Order Contractors Practices
18PBRN Task Order Contractors Age-Range of
Patients
19PBRN Task Order Contractors Patient
Race/Ethnicity
20PBRN Task Order Contractors Physician Provider
Discipline
21PBRN Task Orders To Date
- First award made in July, 2007
- Twelve RFTOs released/funded to date
- Funding 4.7 million
- One project completed (12 month task order)
22PBRN Task Order Projects
- Integrating evidence-based clinical and community
services - Preparing primary care to respond to a pan-flu
public health threat - Assessing the costs to primary care of collecting
and reporting quality-related data - Assessing barriers to quality measurement and
reporting in primary care - Clinical impact of nurse-based care management
- Development of a health literacy universal
precautions toolkit
23PBRN Task Order Projects
- Primary care management of sleep apnea
- Pediatric asthma hospitalizations and the quality
of primary care - Implementation and evaluation of electronic
standing orders - Primary care participation in health information
exchanges - Establishing benchmarks for the medical office
survey on patient safety - Management in primary care of patients suspected
of having CA-MRSA infections
24ACTION Accelerating Change and Transformation
in Organizations and Networks
- 5-year model of field-based research
- 15 large partnerships
- Partnerships include over 150 collaborating
organizations - Partners located in all States
25 Through ACTION, Partnering to Promote Knowledge
Transfer and Exchange
DECISION-MAKERS
RESEARCHERS
Info Tools
Info Tools
PUBLICATIONS
26ACTION Goals
- Be responsive to user, stakeholder and
operational needs for innovation in health care
delivery - Accelerate the development, implementation,
dissemination and uptake of evidence-based
products, strategies and findings into practice - Prioritize generalizable approaches to enable
spread to other settings
27Current ACTION Partners?
- Health Services Research Organizations
- Abt Associates, Inc., Cambridge, MA
- American Institutes for Research, Silver Spring,
MD - RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA
- RTI International, Research Triangle Park, NC
- The CNA Corporation, Alexandria, VA
- Academic Institutions
- Boston University School of Public Health,
Boston, MA - Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN
- UCSF School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA
- University of Iowa Center for Health Policy and
Research, Iowa City, IA - Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New
York, NY - Yale New Haven Health Services Corporation, New
Haven, CT - Other Health Care Organizations
- American Association of Homes and Services for
the Aging, Washington, DC - Aurora Health Care, Milwaukee, WI
- Denver Health, Denver, CO
- Health Research and Educational Trust, Chicago,
IL
28Future ACTION Partners?
- Anticipate an open recompetion of ACTION by 2010
29ACTION Partnerships Include
- Hospital systems
- Ambulatory care practices
- Long-term care systems (nursing homes, home
health, assisted living) - Safety net systems
- Health plans
- University schools of medicine, nursing, public
health, health policy, and management - Health services and outcomes research
organizations - Veterans Integrated Delivery System Networks
- QIOs
- JCAHO, NCQA and other national organizations for
healthcare quality assurance - Associations of healthcare providers
- Consumer advocacy organizations
30Why ACTION?
- Because We Need To
- Quit describing problems, start solving them
- Partner to promote knowledge transfer and
exchange - Speed up getting project results
- Encourage uptake of innovation to improve health
care delivery
31How Does Contract Process Work?
- Project concepts welcomed from all sources, any
time - Topics must be critical to AHRQ, health systems,
sponsors - Solicit proposals from closed pool of ACTION
partnerships throughout the year - ACTION partnerships submit proposals within 4-6
weeks - Proposal review by small ad hoc committee of
experts - 2-4 months from solicitation to award
32How Does Funding Work?
- 2006 - 2008 ? 58 awards totaling 30.2 million
- 78 competitive awards
- 22 sole source (most externally funded)
- Average award 520 K (range 120K to 3
million) - Average duration 23 months (range 9 to 36
months)
33Amounts Awarded by Topic
Topic Millions
Patient Safety 12.2
Organization/Value 5.2
Public Health Preparedness 4.5
Healthcare Information Technology 3.8
Prevention 3.3
Long-term Care 1.2
Total 30.2
34External Sponsorship, 2006-2008
- 13 fully sponsored projects
- RWJF (1)
- CDC (6)
- HRSA (2)
- ASPR (4)
- 3 co-sponsored projects
- DoD
- ONC
- CMS
35Main Strategic Advantages
- Extensive depth and breadth of care settings,
data and implementation capacity - Huge diversity (geographic, demographic, payer)
among gt100 million recipients of care - Speed ? average project duration of 23 months
- Focus on knowledge transfer and exchange
36How Do We Encourage Knowledge Transfer and
Exchange?
- Examples of project deliverables
- Workshops, webcasts, training programs, technical
assistance in care delivery settings - DVDs, how to guides, workbooks
- Presentations to healthcare operational
leadership - Live/web-assisted conferences
- Tested scalable, scenario-appropriate models
- Publications in peer-reviewed and trade journals
- Ready access to Steering Committee members
organizations (e.g., AHA, MGMA, NBGH, RWJF) for
rapid dissemination (member webcasts, listserves,
annual meetings, journals)
37PBRN Task Order Example 1Pandemic Flu
Management in Primary Care
- How to manage
- patient surges
- during pandemic flu?
- HIT-assisted
- systems to
- faciliate patient self-management.
- Development of enhanced interactive phone systems
- Interactive website with patient education
materials - University of Oklahoma (OKPRN)
- 12 month project
38PBRN Example 2Measuring costs to primary care
practices of collecting/reporting quality data
- Policy issue What is the cost to a primary care
practice of collecting/reporting quality-related
data? Who should bear the financial burden? - Task Order Awards One Task Order to North
Carolina (NCNC) to measure costs of
collecting/reporting global quality measures
Second Task Order to Univ Colorado (SNOCAP) to
measure costs of collecting/reporting
diabetes-specific measures - Results anticipated November, 2008 (14 month
projects)
39PBRN Example 3Management of Suspected CA-MRSA
- Congressional appropriation to AHRQ in December,
2007 - CDC has established evidence-informed principles
for ambulatory management but feasibility/actual
outcomes unknown - Three task orders awarded August, 2008
40ACTION Is 2 ½ Years Old
- Some early task orders are completed and others
have interim results. -
- How are we doing?
41Example 1 60 MRSA Infection Reduction in
Indianapolis Hospitals
- Problem
- gt126,000 MRSA infections per yr in hospitals
- gt5,000 patients die as a result
- Over 2.5 billion excess healthcare costs
- Products and Results
- Indiana University developed and implemented a
novel approach to reduce MRSA in ICUs in
hospital systems in Indianapolis - improved surveillance, hand hygiene, contact
isolation - Avg 60 reduction in MRSA infections in
intervention units 20 reduction in control
units - Other hospitals in the Indianapolis area and
elsewhere eager to adopt this approach - Congress funding AHRQ to further enhance and
spread successful approaches to reduce MRSA and
other healthcare associated infections
42Example 2 National Spread of TeamSTEPPS
- Problem
- Poor communication and lack of teamwork among
health care professionals contribute to errors in
patient safety - Products and Results
- AHRQ, DoD and American Institutes for Research
built national training and support network for
TeamSTEPPS, an evidence-based teamwork system - TeamSTEPPS National Implementation program fully
operational nationwide - 1200 Master Trainers/Change Agents being trained
(including in ACTION partnerships) - Other spread e.g., all Maine hospitals using
TeamSTEPPS
43Example 3 10 Million in Reduced Waste at Denver
Health Hospital
- Problem
- Estimates of overuse, underuse, and misuse of
resources range from 30 (Midwest Business Group
on Health) to 50 (Intermountain Health Care) of
all healthcare expenses in the US - Products and Results
- Denver Health trained all hospital middle
managers in waste reduction using Lean - Examples
- Better organized respiratory therapy equipment ?
40 reduction in time spent searching (estimated
9,220/year saved) - Disposal of 75 dumpsters of old files, equipment,
supplies, hazardous materials ? 300,000 in
capital improvement and improved safety - Switch from paper to electronic forms ? cost
savings of 7,500/yr
44Example 4 Improved Health Care Planning in
Disasters
- Problem
- Lack of planning for emergencies
- Example Hurricane Katrina
- Products and Results (3 of many examples)
- Alternate Site Locator to help State and local
officials quickly locate appropriate alternate
health care sites if existing ones are
overwhelmed - Emergency Preparedness Resource Inventory to help
local/regional planners inventory equipment,
personnel, and supplies in advance - Staffing for Disaster Preparedness Response Model
to improve antibiotic dispensing and vaccination
campaigns for disease outbreaks
45Questions? Comments?
Contacts
- ACTION Program Officer Cynthia.Palmer_at_ahrq.hhs.go
v - ACTION Fact Sheet at www.ahrq.gov/research/action
.pdf - PBRN Program Officer David.Lanier_at_ahrq.hhs.gov
- PBRN website www.ahrq.gov/research/primarix.htm