| Literature DB >> 24371464 |
Sally E Dodds1, Patricia M Herman2, Lee Sechrest3, Ivo Abraham3, Melanie D Logue4, Amy L Grizzle3, Rick A Rehfeld3, Terry J Urbine3, Randy Horwitz1, Robert L Crocker1, Victoria H Maizes1.
Abstract
Integrative medicine (IM) is a clinical paradigm of whole person healthcare that combines appropriate conventional and complementary medicine (CM) treatments. Studies of integrative healthcare systems and theory-driven evaluations of IM practice models need to be undertaken. Two health services research methods can strengthen the validity of IM healthcare studies, practice theory, and fidelity evaluation. The University of Arizona Integrative Health Center (UAIHC) is a membership-supported integrative primary care clinic in Phoenix, AZ. A comparative effectiveness evaluation is being conducted to assess its clinical and cost outcomes. A process evaluation of the clinic's practice theory components assesses model fidelity for four purposes: (1) as a measure of intervention integrity to determine whether the practice model was delivered as intended; (2) to describe an integrative primary care clinic model as it is being developed and refined; (3) as potential covariates in the outcomes analyses, to assist in interpretation of findings, and for external validity and replication; and (4) to provide feedback for needed corrections and improvements of clinic operations over time. This paper provides a rationale for the use of practice theory and fidelity evaluation in studies of integrative practices and describes the approach and protocol used in fidelity evaluation of the UAIHC.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24371464 PMCID: PMC3863495 DOI: 10.1155/2013/652047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Initial business plan components and final practice theory components.
| Initial business plan components | Practice theory components |
|---|---|
| Philosophies and principles of IM and evidence-based primary care. | Integrated care (comprehensive and coordinated) inclusive of complementary medicine (CM) interventions. |
| Prevention and health promotion services together with treatment and disease management. | |
| Use of less invasive and natural treatments and interventions. | |
| Whole person care. | |
| Healing orientation to support the individual's innate healing capacity. | |
| Practitioners exemplify IM principles and commit to self-exploration and self-development. | |
| Patient-centered care experienced by patients as a true health partnership. | Patient-centered partnership (practitioner communication style, mutual decision making, empathy, patient trust, adequate visit time, and Health Partnership Acknowledgement form). |
| Services not typically provided in primary care (educational classes/groups, group visits). | Services not typically provided in primary care (educational classes and groups, group visits). |
| A team care model with health coaches. | Integrative team care model with health coaches. |
| Hybrid financing model. | Hybrid financing model. |
| Enhanced access to care. | Enhanced access to care (shorter wait time to appointments, front desk helpfulness). |
Philosophies and principles of integrative medicine (IM) and evidence-based primary care.
| Integrative medicine | |
|---|---|
| A healing-oriented medicine that considers the whole person (body, mind, and spirit), including all aspects of lifestyle. It reemphasizes the relationship between patient and physician and integrates the best of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) with the best of conventional medicine [ | |
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| Primary care | |
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| Primary healthcare is the provision of healthcare services that are accessible and integrated (comprehensive, coordinated, and continuous) from clinicians who are accountable for addressing a large majority of personal healthcare needs through a sustained partnership with patients while practicing in the context of family and community [ | |
UAIHC practice theory components and fidelity measures.
| Component, subcomponent | Patient experiences questionnaire | Practitioner experiences questionnaire | Medical records | Administrative/billing data |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Integrated care (comprehensive and coordinated) inclusive of CAM interventions | ||||
| Comprehensive | Number and type of services/referralsa | |||
| Coordinated | Rating of treatment plan coordinationa | |||
| Integrated conventional and CAM | Type and frequency conventional and CAM prescribeda | Type and frequency conventional and CAM billed/used from tiera | ||
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| Prevention and health promotion services together with treatment and disease management | ||||
| Practitioner… | Type and frequency of prevention, lifestyle interventions prescribeda | Number and type of lifestyle/health promotion/prevention classes and groups used from membership tiera | ||
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| Use of less invasive and natural treatments and interventions | ||||
| Use of natural products, lifestyle interventions before or with Rx or invasive proceduresa | ||||
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| Whole person care | ||||
| Practitioner knows your… | Whole person review of systemsa | |||
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| Healing orientation to support body's innate healing capacity | ||||
| Use of treatments, products, to support healing capacity; treatment plans support innate healinga | ||||
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| IM practitioners exemplify principles and commit to self-exploration and development | ||||
| Team values self-care; healthy activity is encouraged; enough time taken for self-care; occupational stress; reflection on changes in approach to carea | ||||
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| Patient-centered partnership | ||||
| Practitioner communication | Practitioner… | |||
| Shared decision making | Practitioner discuss… | |||
| Empathy | 10-item measure of provider empathyd | |||
| Trust | Can tell anything; trust with your care; tells the truth; cares about your health; cares about you; rate trust 1–10c | |||
| Time | Enough time spentc | |||
| Partnership | Discussion of UAIHC Health Partnership Acknowledgement (HPA) noted in charta | Signed HPA in UAIHC membership filea | ||
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| Provision of other services not typically provided in primary care | ||||
| Number and type of UAIHC classes and groups recommended in treatment plansa | Number and type of classes and groups attended through UAIHC member tiera | |||
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| Integrative team care with health coaches | ||||
| Shared vision, safety, task orient, support innovation | 14-item measure of team climatee | |||
| Shared philosophies of IM health and healing | Team members… | |||
| Integrative treatment planning | Team/treatment plan… | Patient team identified in charta | Complex patients documented in team meeting recordsa | |
| Health coaches | Number of visits with health coaches used through member tiera | |||
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| Hybrid financing model | ||||
| Member tier chosen, frequency of tier changes, frequency of additional visits purchased, member drop out; utilization rates of tier benefitsa | ||||
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| Enhanced access to care | ||||
| Timeliness of visit | Wait time to appointmenta | |||
| Courtesy of staff | Helpful, courteous clerksb | |||
| Longer visit time | Practitioner spend enough timec | Duration of most recent visita | Duration of most recent visita | |
aStudy item/variable.
bAmbulatory Care Experiences Survey (ACES) [33].
cConsumer Assessment of Health Plans Study (CAHPS) [34].
dConsultation and Relational Empathy measure (CARE) [35].
eTeam Climate Inventory (TCI) [36].