| Literature DB >> 22568935 |
Randall Teal1, Dawn M Bergmire, Matthew Johnston, Bryan J Weiner.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since 2003, the United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) has sought to restructure the clinical research enterprise in the United States by promoting collaborative research partnerships between academically-based investigators and community-based physicians. By increasing community-based provider participation in research (CBPPR), the NIH seeks to advance the science of discovery by conducting research in clinical settings where most people get their care, and accelerate the translation of research results into everyday clinical practice. Although CBPPR is seen as a promising strategy for promoting the use of evidence-based clinical services in community practice settings, few empirical studies have examined the organizational factors that facilitate or hinder the implementation of CBPPR. The purpose of this study is to explore the organizational start-up and early implementation of CBPPR in community-based practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22568935 PMCID: PMC3482599 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-7-41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Figure 1Organizational model of innovation implementation.
Figure 2The National Cancer Institute’s community clinical oncology program. Adapted from: Kaluzny AD, Morrissey JP, McKinney MM. Emerging organizational networks: the case of the Community Clinical Oncology Program. In SS Mick and Associates, Innovations in Health Care Delivery: Insights for Organization Theory. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1990.
Characteristics of the CCOP Organizations in Their First Year of Operation
| A | 2002 | 3 | 11 | 3.7 | 4 | 1474 |
| B | 2005 | 7 | 10 | 7.2 | 4 | 2470 |
| C | 2002 | 2 | 29 | 9.3 | 4 | 4115 |
Source: CCOP organizations’ first submitted CCOP progress report.
Note: a. Includes physicians who enrolled at least 1 patient on a treatment and/or CP/C trial.
b. Does not include the PI, co-PI, or CCOP Administrator.
Number and Type of Interview Participants per CCOP Organization, 2008 to 2011
| CCOP A | Number | 17 | 5 | 2 | 2 |
| | Type | CCOP PI | CCOP PI | CCOP PI | CCOP PI |
| | | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin |
| | | 2 hospital admin | 1 hospital admin | | |
| | | 6 physicians | 2 physicians | | |
| | | 7 CRAs/support staff* | | | |
| CCOP B | Number | 11 | 6 | 2 | 2 |
| | Type | CCOP PI | CCOP PI | CCOP PI | CCOP PI |
| | | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin |
| | | 1 hospital admin | 2 hospital admin | | |
| | | 4 physicians 4CRAs/support staff* | 1 physician | | |
| | | | 1 research nurse | | |
| CCOP C | Number | 19 | 6 | 2 | 2 |
| | Type | CCOP P I | CCOP PI | CCOP PI | CCOP PI |
| | | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin | CCOP Admin |
| | | 3 hospital admin | 1 hospital admin | | |
| | | 2 physicians | 3 physicians | | |
| 12 CRAs/support staff* |
* Each site visit included a group interview with clinical research associates (CRAs) and CCOP support staff managing IRB and regulatory issues.
Occurrence of each coded text unit from interviews conducted between 2008 to 2011
| | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 39 | 49 | 46 | 134 | So far during this current grant period they’ve only put 11 patients on and they were pretty good about putting about one-third of the patients for the program overall on. So they were good for 30 or 35 [patients]. | |
| 44 | 36 | 32 | 112 | I had the feeling that they were fairly confident, not overwhelmingly confident but fairly confident that they’d be able to do it [make the minimum requirements to become a CCOP]. | |
| 79 | 54 | 55 | 188 | Well, we were doing the research and I don’t know if they [hospital management] still know exactly what the CCOP is. They know it’s a grant for our research program. I don’t think there’s a lot of understanding at exactly how much that the research staff does. | |
| 97 | 95 | 68 | 260 | We’re having problems with the trials. We are not—and across the board, the physicians from different areas—the Rad Onc physicians are saying we just don’t have the RTOG trials that we need to be able to work with you all. | |
| 221 | 228 | 237 | 686 | …so we'll see a patient, say we have somebody hat comes in adjuvant colon cancer, and then they potentially could be eligible for N0147. Then we’ll put the information in the chart for the physician with our card and the consent…then we’ll put the guts of the protocol, like the schema and the treatment plan, eligibility in the calendar, and then I have a—what we call pink sheet. It’s a communication sheet that we’ll write out for the physician, and we’ll tell him this is what it looks like this patient might be eligible for, and these are the tests needed, and there’s the consent. | |
| 96 | 65 | 83 | 244 | I don’t feel the Rad Oncs are as committed to it, for whatever reason, and it may be because of the way they’re set up and the way they do their work, and it may be set up because of the way their administration is, because we’re a private group. I don’t know for whatever reason why. There's no financial incentive to do it, but I just don’t feel that they’re into it as much. | |
| 51 | 45 | 43 | 139 | I think they [physicians] all want to do research. I think they all want to get their patients the highest level of care. I think that in order to participate with the studies that that’s what they’re doing. So they’re looking for the best way to serve their patients, as well as helping with the hospital. | |
| 121 | 137 | 120 | 378 | It [economic downturn] has had more of an impact than I would have thought. I was probably naïve about that but patients are much more concerned about their co-pays and about what additional charges they might be facing for things that most of us would consider mundane visits like the infusion room charge when they’re here getting a free drug on a research study. Those things sometimes have been knockout punches for us. | |
| 748 | 709 | 684 | 2141 | ||
*This is a pre-implementation construct only coded during Yr 1 interviews.
Figure 3Total patient accrual by CCOP Organizations. Source: The CCOP, MBCCOP, and Research Base Management System website: https://ccop.nci.nih.gov/Note: Total patient accrual includes all patients enrolled in NCI-sponsored cancer prevention and control trials and NCI-sponsored cancer treatment trials. CCOPs report patient accrual to the NCI on a 12-month basis from 1 June to 31 May.