| Literature DB >> 32695488 |
Amy M Kilbourne1,2, Patricia L Jones3, David Atkins1.
Abstract
Translation of research to practice is challenging. In addition to the scientific challenges, there are additional hurdles in navigating the rapidly changing US health care system. There is a need for innovative health interventions that can be adopted in "real-world" settings. Barriers to translation involve misaligned timing of research funding and health system decision-making, lack of research questions aligned with health system and community priorities, and limited incentives in academia for health system and community-based research. We describe new programs from the US Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development (HSR&D) and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) Programs that are building capacity for Learning Health System research. These programs help to incentivize adopting and adapting Learning Health System principles to ensure that, primarily in implementation science within academic/veterans affairs health systems, there is alignment of the research with the health system and community needs. Both HSR&D and NCATS CTSA Program encourage researchers to develop problem-focused research innovations in partnership with health systems and communities to ultimately facilitate design treatments that are feasible in "real-world" practice. © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Implementation science; Learning Health Systems; career development; real-world evidence; translational science
Year: 2020 PMID: 32695488 PMCID: PMC7348004 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2020.25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Strategic investments to addressing common barriers to translation
| Barrier | Programs and resources addressing barriers | |
|---|---|---|
| NIH CTSA Program | VA HSR&D | |
|
| Enterprise-wide informatics tools for health systems: for example, i-REX, SMART IRB, Accrual to Clinical Trials | HSR&D Innovation Initiative: more rapid funding for high-risk projects that are responsive to health system needs |
|
| CEnR-Nav program | COREs: access, suicide prevention, opioid/pain, virtual care |
|
| CTSA Program Collaborative Innovation Award promotes cross-cutting translational methods (e.g., implementation science) via U01 and R21 mechanisms | Implementation Research Project mechanism (test implementation strategies in routine practice) |
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| Development, Implementation, and Assessment of Novel Training in Domain-based Competencies (DIAMOND) initiative | HSR&D research priorities updated to include cross-cutting health services research methods: informatics/data science, complexity science/health systems engineering, and implementation science |
Examples of CTSA programs and VA-funded programs with Learning Health System initiatives
| Program | Description | Goals and key impacts |
|---|---|---|
| Wakeforest College of Medicine CTSA Program | Wakeforest Clinical and Translational Science Institute | The CTSA Programʼs vision is to “be a catalyst for Wake Forest Baptist Healthʼs transition to a preeminent Academic LHS. (The) LHS focuses on the health of our community, maintains a strong pipeline of research findings and investigators across translational disciplines, and aligns science, informatics, incentives, and culture to continuously improve and innovate. (The LHS) embeds best practices seamlessly into the delivery process and capture new knowledge as a by-product of every interaction” |
| Vanderbilt University CTSA Program | Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research LHS program | “Bringing clinical research and clinical operations together as collaborative partners to … promote, develop, and support ventures aligned with the mission of LHS; ensure technical, procedural, and human infrastructure is in place for LHS evolution; and expedite efficient pursuit of activities for the purpose of improving the quality of patient care.” |
| VA HSR&D Consortium of Research (CORES) | Suicide Prevention Research Impact NeTwork | 1) Facilitate help-seeking and engagement in care; 2) match level of risk to suicide prevention approaches, and tailor approaches to Veterans’ needs; and 3) implement, evaluate, and sustain evidence-based and promising interventions in a national network of investigators across US VA medical centers working in close collaboration with VA national leaders in mental health and suicide prevention |
| QUERI – VISN partnered implementation initiative | Consortium to Disseminate and Understand Implementation of Opioid Use Disorder Treatment (CONDUIT) | CONDUIT was a competitively awarded multi-regional quality enhancement program focused on a clinical priority chosen by VA VISN health system leaders which brings together implementation experts with health system leaders to scale up effective practices for opioid and pain treatment using implementation strategies. Success of CONDUIT is based on achievement of quality improvement goals (e.g., receipt of medication-assisted theory for opioid use disorder, receipt of guideline-concordant pain treatment) based on national clinical performance indicators. |
VISN, Veterans Integrated Service Network.