| Literature DB >> 31747879 |
D M Bravata1,2,3,4,5, L J Myers6,7,8,9, B Homoya6,7, E J Miech6,7,8,9, N A Rattray6,7,9, A J Perkins6,10, Y Zhang6,11, J Ferguson6,7, J Myers6,7, A J Cheatham6,7, L Murphy6,7, B Giacherio12, M Kumar12, E Cheng13,14, D A Levine15, J J Sico16,17, M J Ward18,19, T M Damush6,7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transient ischemic attack (TIA) patients are at high risk of recurrent vascular events; timely management can reduce that risk by 70%. The Protocol-guided Rapid Evaluation of Veterans Experiencing New Transient Neurological Symptoms (PREVENT) developed, implemented, and evaluated a TIA quality improvement (QI) intervention aligned with Learning Healthcare System principles.Entities:
Keywords: Audit and feedback; Cerebrovascular disease; Implementation science; Learning healthcare system; Quality of care; Systems redesign; Transient ischemic attack
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31747879 PMCID: PMC6865042 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-019-1517-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Intervention Components Mapped onto Barriers to Providing Quality Care. Figure 1 displays the barriers to providing excellent quality of care for patients with transient ischemic attack (TIA) or minor stroke that were identified through interviews with front-line clinicians as well as the components of the PREVENT program that were designed to overcome each barrier
Fig. 2The PREVENT Web-Based Hub. The home page of the web-based PREVENT Hub included a prominent display of the facility without-fail rate (upper left red box) and the pass rates for each of the seven key processes of care (in blue text)
Fig. 3PREVENT Stepped-wedge Design. The stepped-wedge design included two sites per wave and a total of three waves. The study included: a 12-month baseline period (yellow); a12-month post-implementation period (orange), which began with a kick-off (brown), and during which the site teams participated in monthly virtual collaborative sessions (telephone symbol); and a sustainability period (blue)
Qualitative Data Collection Plan
| FOCUS OF INQUIRY | DATA | PERIOD | METHOD | PARTICIPANTS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Structure: TIA protocol; TIA providers Process: how clinical teams use data to improve quality; local context | Formal, semi-structured, qualitative interviews | Baseline 6 months into active implementation 12 months into active implementation Sustainability | Audio-recorded & transcribed interviews | Providers who care for and support patients with TIA |
Structure: Team composition Process: Team formation; impact evaluation; action planning | Observations of team kickoffs for active implementation | After baseline at the start of active implementation | ||
Structure: Clinical providers’ attendance and participation Process: Community of care interactions; implementation progress | Observations of Virtual Collaborative Calls | Monthly 1 Hour Calls | ||
Structure: Local front-line providers involved in TIA care Process: Team dynamics; implementation progress; use of data | Observations of facility visits | Post Visit Debriefings | Audio-recorded & transcribed interviews & field notes | |
Structure: Role and service of key informants Process: Use of implementation strategy; implementation progress | FAST* template: a rapid, systematic method for capturing key concepts across data sources | Project Duration | FAST Template | |
Structure: Facility team members engaged in quality improvement Process: Facilitation contents and dose | External Facilitation Tracking Sheet | FAST Template and Facilitator notes | Providers who locally adapt PREVENT to improve quality of TIA care |
*FAST refers to the Fast Analysis and Synthesis Template [41]
Fig. 4PREVENT Sample Size Design. The panels display how the power curves vary with changes in the coefficient of variation (CV)