| Literature DB >> 26772972 |
Sylvia J Hysong1,2, Candice L Thomas3, Christiane Spitzmüller4, Amber B Amspoker5,6, LeChauncy Woodard7,8, Varsha Modi9,10, Aanand D Naik11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Team coordination within clinical care settings is a critical component of effective patient care. Less is known about the extent, effectiveness, and impact of coordination activities among professionals within VA Patient-Aligned Care Teams (PACTs). This study will address these gaps by describing the specific, fundamental tasks and practices involved in PACT coordination, their impact on performance measures, and the role of coordination task complexity. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26772972 PMCID: PMC4714534 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0368-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Example process flow of a tobacco cessation screening and therapy coordinative activity performed by outpatient PACTs
Overview of study methods, by objective
| Element | Objective 1 | Objective 2 | Objective 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Objective | (a) Characterize coordination practices utilized by PACTs and (b) examine their association with clinical performance | Determine the level of coordinative complexity required for each outpatient clinical performance measure | Evaluate the role of measure complexity in how PACT coordination measures relate to EPRP performance measures |
| Design | Web-based survey of coordination practices | Expert ratings of EPRP measures on coordinative complexity, obtained via functional job analysis (FJA) | Statistical analysis of the impact of coordinative complexity on the association between coordination practices and clinical performance |
| Participants | Initial validation sample will include teamlet members of 500 PACTs. Full survey deployment will include teamlet members of 1600 PACTs nationwide | 6–8 3rd or 4th year residents in VA Primary Care rotations, to serve as subject matter experts (SME) | None. This aim combines datasets from aims 1 and 2 |
| Measures | Outcome: clinical performance, measured by 25 outpatient EPRP measures | Clinical performance: same as objective 1b | Outcome: clinical performance, measured the same as in objectives 1b and 2 |
| Predictors: coordination practices, measured via web-based survey developed for this project | Coordinative complexity: average Worker Interaction scale ratings for the set of tasks comprising each EPRP measure | Predictor: coordination, measured the same as in objective 1b | |
| Covariate: PACT integration, calculated with PACT recognition metrics, available via the Patient-Aligned Care Teams Compass Cube | Coordinative complexity ratings: same as objective 2 | ||
| Procedures | Survey development: coordination survey to be developed and piloted using small groups of PACT teamlet members ( | FJA focus groups: SMEs will generate FJA-style lists of task statements comprising the work required to perform each EPRP measure to standard | No new procedures, this aim is strictly analytical |
| Survey deployment: web-based deployment via SurveyMonkey, using recruitment strategy recommended by Dillman | Coordinative complexity rating: research team will rate each task on the worker interaction FJA scale | ||
| Data analysis | (a) To evaluate O&B’s measurement model: series of two-level CFAs, followed by EFAs (where fit is unacceptable) and Cronbach’s alphas. To evaluate O&B’s structural model: structural equations modeling (b) hierarchical linear models with PACT level coordination as predictors of clinical performance | No hypothesis tests planned; descriptive statistics for coordinative complexity and number of tasks per EPRP measure | Same as objective 1b, except that we will conduct hierarchical linear models separately for higher versus lower complexity measures and will then compare regression coefficients between models |
Clinical performance measures to be used
| Composite measure | Component measures |
|---|---|
| Behavioral health screening | 1. Vets screened annually for major depression dx |
| 2. Screened positive for depression with timely SRE | |
| 3. PTSD screening using the PC-PTSD at required times | |
| 4. Vets screened for alcohol misuse with score GE 5 with timely brief counseling | |
| 5. Screened pos. at required intervals for PTSD with timely SRE | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 6. DM: outpatient—HbA1c annual |
| 7. DM: HbA1c poor control (OP) | |
| 8. DM: BP LT 140/90 (OP) | |
| 9. DM: retinal exam, timely by disease (OP) | |
| 10. DM: renal testing (OP) | |
| Ischemic heart | 11. IHD LDL-C LT 100 or mod dose statin (OP) |
| 12. HTN: Dx HTN and DM with BP less than 140/90 (OP) | |
| 13. HTN: Dx HTN and no DM with BP less than 150/90 (OP) | |
| 14. HTN: outpatient BP < 140/90 ages 18–59 | |
| Prevention | 15. Obese patients screened and offered weight management |
| 16. Pneumococcal immunizations (OP) | |
| 17. Influenza immunizations age GE 65 (OP) | |
| 18. Influenza immunization 18–64 (OP) | |
| 19. Breast cancer screening women 50–74 years (OP) | |
| 20. Cervical cancer screening women ages 21–29 years | |
| 21. Cervical cancer screening women ages 30–64 | |
| 22. Colorectal cancer screening ages 50–75 | |
| Tobacco | 23. Patients using tobacco offered meds (OP) |
| 24. Patients using tobacco provided with counsel (OP) | |
| 25. Patients using tobacco offered referral (OP) |