| Literature DB >> 25885661 |
Rebecca S Etz1, Rosalind E Keith2, Anna M Maternick3, Karen L Stein4, Roy T Sabo5, Melissa S Hayes6, Purvi Sevak7, John Holland8, Jesse C Crosson9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is predicted to increase in incidence by 42% from 1995 to 2025. Although most adults with diabetes seek care from primary care practices, adherence to treatment guidelines in these settings is not optimal. Many practices lack the infrastructure to monitor patient adherence to recommended treatment and are slow to implement changes critical for effective management of patients with chronic conditions. Supporting Practices to Adopt Registry-Based Care (SPARC) will evaluate effectiveness and sustainability of a low-cost intervention designed to support work process change in primary care practices and enhance focus on population-based care through implementation of a diabetes registry.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25885661 PMCID: PMC4399225 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0232-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Specification of the SPARC intervention strategy
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| Actors | Peer mentors: clinicians who have implemented and maintained a diabetes registry in their practice |
| Physician informaticists: clinicians with expertise in primary care data systems and reporting | |
| Actions | 1) Two champion meetings |
| • Provide education to intervention and control practices on how to implement a diabetes registry, including: | |
| − Registry development | |
| − Population health in primary care delivery | |
| − The American Diabetes Association’s guidelines for patients with diabetes | |
| − Diabetes registry software options or communicating with EHR vendors about registry functionality | |
| − A practice self-assessment checklist designed to help practices plan and manage potential workflow changes | |
| • Facilitate discussion among intervention practices about the challenges faced during registry implementation and solutions developed to overcome those challenges | |
| • Provide intellectual space for intervention practices to process what they are learning and talk about their experiences with registry implementation, as well as develop a plan for sustaining or expanding their registry | |
| 2) Peer mentoring | |
| • Advise intervention practices on registry implementation and using the materials disseminated at champion meetings. | |
| • Provide intervention practices with access to physician informaticists to assist with use of practice data systems. | |
| Target of the actions | Practice champions: two champions from each intervention and control practice—one clinician champion and one champion who will be a potential user of a registry—will attend the champion meetings. Champions in intervention practices will work with the peer mentor. |
| Temporality and dose | 1) Champion meetings |
| • One champion meeting will be held before the intervention period and a second about 15 months later. | |
| 2) Peer mentoring | |
| • Peer mentors will work with practice champions in intervention practices for the first 12 months of the intervention, maintaining monthly communication through telephone calls and practice visits. | |
| Implementation outcome(s) effected | Change in mean patient hemoglobin A1c scores |
| Justification | We believe that helping practices use existing resources and learn how to solve problems to implement a diabetes registry and related workflow changes will be more sustainable than implementation strategies that rely more heavily on external resources. |