| Literature DB >> 33356790 |
Ann M Nguyen1, Allison M Cuthel2, Erin S Rogers2, Nancy Van Devanter3, Hang Pham-Singer4, Sarah Shih4, Carolyn A Berry2, Donna R Shelley3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: HealthyHearts NYC was a stepped wedge randomized control trial that tested the effectiveness of practice facilitation on the adoption of cardiovascular disease guidelines in small primary care practices. The objective of this study was to identify was to identify attributes of small practices that signaled they would perform well in a practice facilitation intervention implementation.Entities:
Keywords: case study; mixed methods; practice transformation; primary care; qualitative methods
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33356790 PMCID: PMC7768565 DOI: 10.1177/2150132720984411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prim Care Community Health ISSN: 2150-1319
Rating Criteria for Qualitative Documents.
| Rating | Criteria |
|---|---|
| −1 | There is lack of evidence of the theme. This rating indicates that the theme does not have a positive influence on the practice or does not facilitate implementation efforts. The interviewee makes general statements about the theme manifesting in a negative way but without concrete examples: |
| 0 | The influence of the theme was unclear or neutral: |
| +1 | There is evidence of the theme. This rating indicates that the theme has a positive influence on the practice or facilitated implementation efforts. The interviewee describes explicit examples of how the theme manifests itself in a positive way using concrete examples: |
| Missing | Interviewee(s) were not asked about the presence or influence of the construct; or if asked, their responses did not correspond to the intended theme and were instead coded to another construct. Interviewee(s)’ lack of knowledge about a theme does not necessarily indicate missing data and may indicate the absence of the theme. |
Source: Adapted from Damschroder and Lowery.[25]
Profile of Cases.
| High #1 | High #2 | Improved #1 | Improved #2 | Low #1 | Low #2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Practice characteristics | ||||||
| # of FTE providers | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| # of FTE staff | 2 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 8 | 6 |
| # of patients | 943 | 2044 | 727 | 2384 | 1303 | 4424 |
| Patient-centered medical home status | Recognized | Recognized | Recognized | Recognized | Recognized | Recognized |
| Located in a medically underserved area | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
| Lead clinician characteristics | ||||||
| Race | Asian | Black/African American | Black/African American | Asian | Black/African American | Black/African American |
| Ethnicity | Non-Hispanic | Non-Hispanic | Non-Hispanic | Non-Hispanic | Hispanic | Non-Hispanic |
| Sex | Male | Female | Male | Female | Male | Male |
| Age | 55 to 64 | 65+ | 55 to 64 | 45 to 54 | 55 to 64 | 55 to 64 |
| Born in U.S. | No | No | No | No | Yes | No |
| Graduated from medical school in U.S. | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Note. FTE = Full-time equivalent; *Providers were defined as physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants who provided primary care. We did not collect data on specialty type.