Table 1.
EBQI-PCMH core elements | Fidelity assessment criteria |
---|---|
Leadership and frontlines (e.g., top-down, bottom-up) priority-setting process for focusing QI efforts ● Four rounds of priority-setting (1/year, 2011–2014), engaging interdisciplinary regional and healthcare system leaders, frontline providers, staff ● Quality councils (including Veteran patients) and across-site workgroups submitted 2-page project proposals for QI projects for review/approval ● Regional Steering Committee (multidisciplinary regional and local healthcare system executive leaders) reviewed/rated, discussed at in-person meeting, and re-rated ● Seven to 8 highest rated projects approved per round received seed funding, support from VAIL HSRs, completed progress and final reports on their QI projects |
Sum of number of proposals submitted and number approved: high = 8 or more; medium = 4–7; low = 1–3 |
Ongoing technical expertise and coaching/mentoring in QI methods by HSRs, delivered through a QI collaborative ● Quality council leaders participated in bi-weekly support calls with two or three HSRs (87 calls, 2010–14) ● HSRs provided one-on-one mentoring/support for workgroup projects by joining the individual workgroup project meetings ● Semi-annual in-person conferences (7 total, 2010–14), attended by the QI teams, HSRs, regional and healthcare system leaders, patient representatives, frontline providers and staff at EBQI-PACT sites, and subject matter experts. ○ Plenary sessions providing training in QI and the PCMH model, workshops on PCMH topics, and presentations by QI teams on QI projects ○ Formative feedback presentations of PC practice-level data from the PCMH evaluation, including provider and staff burnout and patient satisfaction ○ “Round table” sessions for QI teams to plan and strategize PCMH improvement |
Bi-weekly phone calls: high = participated in 75% or more with an average representation of 2 or more people per call; medium = participated in 75% or more with an average participation of 1–2 representatives per call; low or none = participated in less than 75% with an average participation of less than 1 representative per call Bi-annual in-person learning sessions: high = 10 or more participants per learning session; medium = 5–9 participants; low/none = less than 5 participants |
Use of data and evidence to inform QI efforts with project management support provided by internal coordinators ● 5 HSRs (LR, SS, SV, JD, BS) supported by 2 statistical analysts (AL, MW) and 5 program support staff (NS, AS, ALH, NS, DE) ● 1 FTE internal coordinator for each of 3 local healthcare systems that began in phase 1 ○ Bachelor’s Degree training, little/no previous exposure to quality improvement methods ○ Trained in QI by and support for data/measures from VAIL HSRs ● Rapid reviews of literature pertaining to QI project topics [24] ● Voluntary participation in/use of data/measures support group bi-weekly meetings, and privacy/ethics reviews of QI project activities ● A SharePoint site for housing toolkits from successful QI projects, support for toolkit development |
Proportion of projects using data to diagnose QI problem and track QI project feasibility/acceptability/effectiveness for all approved projects: high = used evidence/data to diagnose QI problem and track progress for 100% of projects; medium = used evidence/data to diagnose and track for more than 60% of QI projects; low = used evidence/data to diagnose and track for 60% or less of QI projects. |
EBQI-PCMH Outcome—implementation and spread of locally developed and initiated QI projects | |
● Implement Steering Committee approved projects, using Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles ● Complete interim and final reports with data to track/monitor progress on achieving QI project objectives ● Briefings, presentations at QI collaborative in-person learning sessions to promote adoption by other sites ● Package QI project tools and materials into toolkits, with assistance from the VAIL project staff |
Number of final reports + toolkits completed: high = 4 or more; medium = 2–3; low = 1; none = 0 |