TY - JOUR
T1 - Promoting learning health system feedback loops
T2 - Experience with a VA practice-based research network card study: VA Card Study Promotes Learning Health System
AU - The WH-PBRN-CIH Writing Group
AU - Golden, Rachel E.
AU - Klap, Ruth
AU - Carney, Diane V.
AU - Yano, Elizabeth M.
AU - Hamilton, Alison B.
AU - Taylor, Stephanie L.
AU - Kligler, Benjamin
AU - Whitehead, Alison M.
AU - Saechao, Fay
AU - Zaiko, Yevgeniya
AU - Pomernacki, Alyssa
AU - Frayne, Susan M.
AU - Bean-Mayberry, Bevanne
AU - Bhoopalam, Sudha
AU - Buckholdt, Kelly E.
AU - DiNardo, Deborah
AU - Dussán, Kathleen Bronson
AU - Hardman, Lisa
AU - Hill, Elizabeth E.
AU - Juiris, Tahira
AU - Koutrouba, Denise
AU - Mattocks, Kristin
AU - Rawson, Gina G.
AU - Rylander, Jeanette
AU - Sadler, Anne G.
AU - Santiago-Cotto, Agnes
AU - Singhal, Divya
AU - Thakar, Ishita
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - Background: We tested the capacity of the 60-site VA Women's Health Practice-Based Research Network (WH-PBRN), embedded within VA, to employ a multisite card study to collect women Veterans' perspectives about Complementary and Integrative Health (CIH) and to rapidly return findings to participating sites and partnered national policy-makers in support of a Learning Health System (LHS) wherein evidence generation informs ongoing improvement. Methods: VA primary care clinic clerks and nurses distributed anonymous surveys (patient feedback forms) at clinics for up to two weeks in fiscal year 2017, asking about CIH behavior and preferred delivery methods. We examined the project's feasibility, representativeness, acceptability, and impact via a tracking system, national administrative data, debriefing notes, and three surveys of WH-PBRN Site Leads. Results: Twenty geographically diverse and largely representative VA Medical Centers and 11 Community-Based Outpatient Clinics volunteered to participate. Over six months, N = 1191 women Veterans responded (median 57; range 8–151 per site). In under three months, we returned local findings benchmarked against multisite findings to all participating sites and summary findings to national VA partners. Sites and partners disseminated results to clinical and leadership stakeholders, who then applied results as warranted. Conclusions: VA effectively mobilized an embedded PBRN to implement a timely, representative, acceptable and impactful operations project. Implications: Card studies by PBRNs within large, national healthcare systems can provide rapid feedback to participating sites and national leaders to guide policies, programs, and practices. Level of Evidence: Self-selected respondents could have biased results.
AB - Background: We tested the capacity of the 60-site VA Women's Health Practice-Based Research Network (WH-PBRN), embedded within VA, to employ a multisite card study to collect women Veterans' perspectives about Complementary and Integrative Health (CIH) and to rapidly return findings to participating sites and partnered national policy-makers in support of a Learning Health System (LHS) wherein evidence generation informs ongoing improvement. Methods: VA primary care clinic clerks and nurses distributed anonymous surveys (patient feedback forms) at clinics for up to two weeks in fiscal year 2017, asking about CIH behavior and preferred delivery methods. We examined the project's feasibility, representativeness, acceptability, and impact via a tracking system, national administrative data, debriefing notes, and three surveys of WH-PBRN Site Leads. Results: Twenty geographically diverse and largely representative VA Medical Centers and 11 Community-Based Outpatient Clinics volunteered to participate. Over six months, N = 1191 women Veterans responded (median 57; range 8–151 per site). In under three months, we returned local findings benchmarked against multisite findings to all participating sites and summary findings to national VA partners. Sites and partners disseminated results to clinical and leadership stakeholders, who then applied results as warranted. Conclusions: VA effectively mobilized an embedded PBRN to implement a timely, representative, acceptable and impactful operations project. Implications: Card studies by PBRNs within large, national healthcare systems can provide rapid feedback to participating sites and national leaders to guide policies, programs, and practices. Level of Evidence: Self-selected respondents could have biased results.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85108402212
U2 - 10.1016/j.hjdsi.2020.100484
DO - 10.1016/j.hjdsi.2020.100484
M3 - Article
C2 - 34175097
AN - SCOPUS:85108402212
SN - 2213-0764
VL - 8
JO - Healthcare
JF - Healthcare
M1 - 100484
ER -