| Literature DB >> 34076567 |
Jon Agley1, Janet Delong1, Andrea Janota2, Anyé Carson2, Jeffrey Roberts1, Gerardo Maupome3.
Abstract
Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) was developed in 2003 as an innovative model to facilitate continuing education and professional development. ECHO emphasizes 'moving knowledge, not people.' To accomplish this, ECHO programs use virtual collaboration and case-based learning to allow practitioners, including those in rural and underserved areas, to receive specialist training. The ECHO model has expanded rapidly and is now used in 44 countries. Preliminary research on ECHO's efficacy and effectiveness has shown promising results, but evidence remains limited and appropriate research outcomes have not been clearly defined. To improve the evidence basis for ECHO, this study of 5 ECHO programs (cancer prevention/survivorship, integrated pain management, hepatitis C, HIV, and LGBTQ+ health care elucidated actionable insights about the ECHO programs and directions in which future evaluations and research might progress. This was a qualitative study following COREQ standards. A trained interviewer conducted 10 interviews and 5 focus groups with 25 unique, purposively sampled ECHO attendees (2 interviews and 1 focus group for each of the 5 programs). Data were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using the general inductive approach, then reviewed for reliability. We identified four major categories (reasons to join ECHO, value of participating in ECHO, ways to improve ECHO, and barriers to participation) composed of 23 primary codes. We suggest that thematic saturation was achieved, and a coherent narrative about ECHO emerged for discussion. Participants frequently indicated they received valuable learning experiences and thereby changed their practice; rigorous trials of learning and patient-level outcomes are warranted. This study also found support for the idea that the ECHO model should be studied for its role in convening communities of practice and reducing provider isolation as an outcome in itself. Additional implications, including for interprofessional education and model evolution, were also identified and discussed.Entities:
Keywords: ECHO; Project ECHO; continuing education; medical education; professional development
Year: 2021 PMID: 34076567 PMCID: PMC8174483 DOI: 10.1080/10872981.2021.1936435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Codebook and definitions
| Designation | Name of Category/Code | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| 1.a. | General continuing education | Anything having to do with wanting to build their own knowledge base, learn more, or grow as a professional. |
| 1.b. | Help for rural or remote providers | Desire to access resources that might be hard to access from the participant’s current location or practice site. |
| 1.c. | Intention to develop networking | Desire to build or grow a professional network by joining ECHO. |
| 1.d. | Need for CE | ECHO was listed as a free CE opportunity. |
| 2.a. | Networking | Networking with others ( |
| 2.a.i. | Third-degree networking | Instances where networking extended beyond participants by at least one degree (e.g. descriptions of how people not attending ECHO were engaged in the ECHO network). |
| 2.b. | Met a technical, legal, or CE requirement | Participant values the ability to meet a requirement by attending ECHO. |
| 2.c. | Structure of ECHO | Something about the overall structure of the program, the norms of ECHO, or other unique features of ECHO was seen as a benefit. |
| 2.d. | Information from didactics | Explicit mention of the value of didactic aspects of the ECHO program. |
| 2.e. | Being able to present or address difficult cases | Value of the ability to either present or review others’ difficult cases. |
| 2.f. | Interprofessional nature | The value of having different professions represented ‘at the table’ (whether in spokes, hubs, or both). |
| 2.f.i. | Equity or lack of hierarchy | Some mentions of interprofessional experience also emphasized a lack of traditional hierarchy. |
| 2.g. | Access to expert opinion | Value of being able to access expert opinion ( |
| 2.h. | Changes to professional practice | Participant indicates that ECHO has changed their professional practice or has led to changes in their practice environment. |
| 3.a. | Facilitate networking | Participant comments related to additional ways in which ECHO might support networking. |
| 3.b. | Structural changes | A sequence of ‘micro-themes’ related to specific modifications that could be made to details of the ECHO programs |
| 3.b.i | Record didactic presentations | Comments about the importance of recording didactics (or, after this was implemented, the value of having them recorded). |
| 3.b.ii | Modify didactic presentations | Suggestions related to how the didactic portion of ECHO could be improved. |
| 3.b.iii | Allow more time for case management | Participant discussion that insufficient time is allocated to case management. |
| 3.b.iv | Reconceptualize or minimize introductions | Critiques specific to the ECHO-based structured way in which participants introduce themselves. |
| 3.c. | Expanding the ECHO community | Suggestions about ways to make the ECHO program ‘bigger’ or to extend beyond the tele-mentoring sessions. |
| 3.d. | Consider braiding telemedicine with ECHO | Ideas about integrating the ECHO education model with clinical practice. |
| 3.e. | Work to facilitate follow-up between sessions | Participant comments about improving continuity, both in terms of didactics (questions) and cases (‘what happened’). |
| 3.f. | Miscellaneous ways to improve | One-off responses that were notable. |
| 4.a. | Time | Statements about the length of time for each session (e.g. duration). |
| 4.b. | Scheduling | Statements about scheduling issues that are |
| 4.c. | Miscellaneous barriers | One-off responses that were notable. |
Exemplar quotes
| Designation | Name of Category/Code | Quote ( |
|---|---|---|
| 1.a. | General continuing education | ‘There was another nurse practitioner doing this and then she was going to be retiring and so they were looking for somebody. I was a little hesitant, and so I started attending the ECHO before I agreed officially to do it … ’ ( |
| 1.b. | Help for rural or remote providers | ‘It’s really, truly worth it and I think we’re really lucky to have it because [Redacted] can be so rural in areas and having access to this can really help those rural providers too.’ ( |
| 1.c. | Intention to develop networking | ‘I’m working with care coordinators and providers from all different corners of the state, so it’s helpful to see what they’re dealing with in a rural setting, but also connect with them in other aspects.’ ( |
| 1.d. | Need for CE | ‘How I found ECHO is that I have to do these CHES credits. I don’t know why. When I was in graduate school, everybody was taking this CHES.’ ( |
| 2.a. | Networking | ‘But if my job is kind of expansive and I have to be a little bit of piece of everything then it’s really helpful. One, to have the information and, two, the networking opportunities. That’s been a big part of it as well.’ ( |
| 2.a.i. | Third-degree networking | ‘For me, it’s the tools and I’m able to share them with a vast, larger audience. Those tools are being used in other practices now. Even though the person wasn’t on the ECHO themselves, those tools are getting shared and spread even further.’ ( |
| 2.b. | Met a technical, legal, or CE requirement | ‘I also very much like the fact that for me, a pull is that it provides CHES credits and in a very easy, easy way.’ ( |
| 2.c. | Structure of ECHO | ‘Also some of the ECHO principles where we all get to talk to each other like a team and condescending tones are not acceptable. So that already is a huge world of difference … And the general etiquette of the ECHO session, how to talk, how to make a presentation, how not to talk down on other people, how not to use insulting terms and all that.’ ( |
| 2.d. | Information from didactics | ‘And I do like the variety in topics, so as someone who leads LGBTQ+ trainings, I’m in education myself, I can tell you the most frequent request I get is, please don’t give me something general. I’ve listened to so many general talks and trainings, I think you can apply that to any topic in healthcare. So I do think that there are some topics that I haven’t really seen presented elsewhere, which is great.’ ( |
| 2.e. | Being able to present or address difficult cases | ‘Honestly, being able to take clients there and present them as a case and get good feedback has made a big change. I’ve been able to bring some of my really complex and weird cases in and get help … ’ ( |
| 2.f. | Interprofessional nature | ‘I like the fact that it is interdisciplinary, which I think is very important for so many reasons. A lot of times when we have these types of rounds or these virtual clinical decision-making things, it tends to be driven a lot by one profession individual, or we tend to get in our specialty silos. So I think the interdisciplinary approach is awesome.’ ( |
| 2.f.i. | Equity or lack of hierarchy | ‘Yeah, I think I like the idea of different people coming together, a multidisciplinary team, in an all-teach, all-learn manner. So, again, it’s not your conventional healthcare system where the consultant is the grand know-it-all.’ ( |
| 2.g. | Access to expert opinion | ‘At one point, I had questions regarding a surgery, and they were able to bring in a surgeon to address those questions. I mean, it’s just a very, very amazing program. There’s so much value.’ ( |
| 2.h. | Changes to professional practice | ‘Well, I would say I’m definitely more knowledgeable in terms of just some of the more up-to-date and multidisciplinary approaches to handling problems.’ ( |
| 3.a. | Facilitate networking | ‘ … it would be nice that I didn’t have to kind of cold call, send a cold letter to saying, “Hey, I saw you on ECHO.” And kind of reinforce who I am and all this other kind of stuff. There’d be a little bit more that the ECHO could maybe help facilitate that.’ ( |
| 3.b. | Structural changes | - |
| 3.b.i | Record didactic presentations | ‘ … having at least the didactic recorded would be really helpful, you know?’ ( |
| 3.b.ii | Modify didactic presentations | ‘Yeah. Maybe have more didactic time in those sessions. Maybe have more … I don’t know, a longer teaching lesson and then still have the case presentations. Maybe have a longer teaching lesson once a quarter.’ ( |
| 3.b.iii | Allow more time for case management | ‘I think for me, maybe it’s because of the structure of the ECHO that I think sometimes it takes a while to get to the good case discussions.’ ( |
| 3.b.iv | Reconceptualize or minimize introductions | ‘ … every time I see ECHO, the process of everyone introducing themselves at the beginning of every ECHO goes on for a long time. And I’m 60. I have the capacity to remember two new names on any given day. After that, I’m done. I’m over.’ ( |
| 3.c. | Expanding the ECHO community | ‘If there was a way we could, in between things, have a question submission that you just did online … That might include some things that we aren’t getting covered otherwise … Maybe it could be like Basecamp where you have a platform, and you leave questions and people who have the answers leave the answers. You just get an email notification to check Basecamp, or you can log in and see. It’s a forum.’ ( |
| 3.d. | Consider braiding telemedicine with ECHO | ‘So I wish it was, we were in a room with a patient and there was kind of an active team problem solving approach with that patient. And logistically, that is a very difficult thing to do.’ ( |
| 3.e. | Work to facilitate follow-up between sessions | ‘Okay. It would be nice at the beginning of the session to, and I don’t think they do on any of those, say, “Do you have any questions about previous sessions?” Just a few, five or 10 minutes … ’ ( |
| 3.f. | Miscellaneous ways to improve | ‘We almost need an ECHO that does nothing but develop resources, and better utilization of resources.’ ( |
| 4.a. | Time | ‘Yeah. It’s hard to schedule out an hour and a half of your day … ’ ( |
| 4.b. | Scheduling | ‘Sometimes the timing, but that’s just the nature of the beast, as they say.’ ( |
| 4.c. | Miscellaneous barriers | ‘For me, because I don’t deal with clinical patients, sometimes the actual clinical case, it’s a little hard for me emotionally, some of these cases. They just seem so difficult, you know? I don’t know if I am saying this right, but it just seems difficult, and it’s just emotionally upsetting a little bit for me.’ ( |