OBJECTIVE: One academically based breast cancer clinic implements decision and communication aids as part of routine clinical care. This quality improvement study aimed to expand reach of these supportive materials and services with budget-neutral program changes. METHODS: We used program theory and continuous quality improvement to design changes to our program. We calculated reach as the number of new patient visits for which we administered decision and communication aids. We compared reach before and after the program changes. RESULTS: Program changes included: reassigning program outreach tasks from over-committed to under-utilized personnel; deploying personnel in floating rather than fixed schedules; and creating a waitlist so service delivery was dynamically reallocated from overbooked to underbooked personnel. Before these changes, we reached 208 visitors with decision aids, and 142 visitors with communication aids. Changes were associated with expanded reach, culminating in program year 2008 with the delivery of 936 decision aids and 285 communication aids. CONCLUSIONS: We observed over a fourfold increase in decision aid reach and a twofold increase in communication aid reach. We attribute increases to recent program changes. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: This study illustrates how program theory and quality improvement methods can contribute to expanded reach of decision and communication aids.
OBJECTIVE: One academically based breast cancer clinic implements decision and communication aids as part of routine clinical care. This quality improvement study aimed to expand reach of these supportive materials and services with budget-neutral program changes. METHODS: We used program theory and continuous quality improvement to design changes to our program. We calculated reach as the number of new patient visits for which we administered decision and communication aids. We compared reach before and after the program changes. RESULTS: Program changes included: reassigning program outreach tasks from over-committed to under-utilized personnel; deploying personnel in floating rather than fixed schedules; and creating a waitlist so service delivery was dynamically reallocated from overbooked to underbooked personnel. Before these changes, we reached 208 visitors with decision aids, and 142 visitors with communication aids. Changes were associated with expanded reach, culminating in program year 2008 with the delivery of 936 decision aids and 285 communication aids. CONCLUSIONS: We observed over a fourfold increase in decision aid reach and a twofold increase in communication aid reach. We attribute increases to recent program changes. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: This study illustrates how program theory and quality improvement methods can contribute to expanded reach of decision and communication aids.
Authors: Clara N Lee; Yuchiao Chang; Nesochi Adimorah; Jeff K Belkora; Beverly Moy; Ann H Partridge; David W Ollila; Karen R Sepucha Journal: J Am Coll Surg Date: 2011-11-06 Impact factor: 6.113
Authors: Mara A Schonberg; Alicia R Jacobson; Gianna M Aliberti; Michelle Hayes; Anne Hackman; Maria Karamourtopolous; Christine Kistler Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2019-09-04 Impact factor: 5.128
Authors: Jeff Belkora; Shelley Volz; Meredith Loth; Alexandra Teng; Margot Zarin-Pass; Dan Moore; Laura Esserman Journal: BMC Health Serv Res Date: 2015-05-28 Impact factor: 2.655