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Measuring QI Intervention Implementation: Helping the Blind Men See?. Becky Yano, PhD, MSPH VA Greater Los Angeles HSR&D Center of Excellence UCLA School of Public Health. Overview of this Talk. Brief orientation to example QI interventions
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Measuring QI Intervention Implementation: Helping the Blind Men See? Becky Yano, PhD, MSPH VA Greater Los Angeles HSR&D Center of Excellence UCLA School of Public Health
Overview of this Talk • Brief orientation to example QI interventions • How context matters sets us up for variable QI intervention deployment • EBQI process for intentional adaptation of evidence into context of local practice • Types of data sources brought to bear on measuring implementation • Including development of a fidelity score • Triangulation of data sources to tell story
QI Intervention (QII) Examples • TIDES (Translating Interventions for Depression into Evidence-based Solutions) • Depression collaborative care model • Lisa Rubenstein, MD & Ed Chaney, PhD (Co-PIs) • QUITS (Quality Improvement Trial for Smoking cessation) • Evidence-based quality improvement approach to implementing smoking cessation guidelines • Scott Sherman, MD & Becky Yano, PhD (Co-PIs)
TIDES Depression Collaborative Care • Evidence base: • >20 RCTs • Depression • toolkit Provider/patient education Depression care manager EBQI QI Informatics support Performance feedback “adaptation” “priority-setting” Leadership support
QUITS Smoking Cessation Trial • Evidence base: • SC clinic referrals • Tobacco quitlines • PC-based intn’s Education “toolkit” Local QI plan development EBQI Expert review/feedback Performance feedback “local buy-in” “priority-setting” Leadership support
Context Matters: Design for It • TIDES • 2:1 intervention-to-control sites x 3 networks (6 intervention + 3 control sites total) • VA network leaders chose sites, we randomized within network (block on network characteristics) • QUITS • Regional concentration in southwest (3 networks) • Matched on size/academic affiliation within network • We chose sites and randomized within network
VISN MAP of TIDES and QUITS QUITS Sites in VISNs 18, 21, 22
Context Matters: Input from Sites • Attitudes/beliefs/experiences • Perceived need for the intervention • Competing demands • Staff open to innovation • PC-MH relationship (relevant to both TIDES and QUITS) • Resources • Perceived time to use program and participate in implementation • Organizational structure, staffing, prior QI experience, tools (access to informatics support) Source: Kirchner JE, Parker LE, Yano EM, COVES evaluation (2007).
Measuring TIDES Implementation:Development of a Fidelity Score • Used semi-structured interviews • Network leaders, medical center leaders, providers, care managers, consumers (patients) • Mental health and primary care at all levels • 106 interviews in week-long site visits at each intervention site (2 interviewers/visit) • Audiotaped and professionally transcribed • Qualitatively analyzed in 5 phases (Atlas.ti) • 22 top level codes top level coding + 20% re-review subcodes subcoding + 100% partner review interpret Source: Kirchner JE, Parker LE, Yano EM, Ritchie MJ, COVES evaluation (2007).
Measuring TIDES Implementation:Development of a Fidelity Score • TIDES activity top level code • Subcodes for TIDES components • Provider education • Depression care management (DCM) • Patient education • Provider reminders/other informatics support • Performance feedback • Leadership support Source: Kirchner JE, Parker LE, Yano EM, Ritchie MJ, COVES evaluation (2007).
Measuring TIDES Implementation:Development of a Fidelity Score • Sub-subcodes in each TIDES component(eg, depression care management or DCM) • DCM/patient interaction content • DCM/patient interaction non-content • DCM/provider interaction content • DCM/provider interaction non-content • DCM supervisory issues • other roles and relationships of DCM • Two coders rated each site based on quotes Source: Kirchner JE, Parker LE, Yano EM, Ritchie MJ, COVES evaluation (2007).
TIDES Fidelity Score Example* *Examined awareness, mentions, how disseminated, penetration, consistency.
TIDES Fidelity Scoring • Level of implementation (high/medium/low) • Two coders re-reviewed all quotes • Considered awareness (y/n), mentions (y/n), how disseminated, penetration, consistency • 1 person saying something 10x ≠ 10 people saying 1x Yes, recall an email Yes, went to 5 sessions Yes, saw those LA folks Yes, rec’d guide Yes, amazing info!!! Yes, saw weblink and all No, never got training TIDES? What’s that? vs.
QUITS Organizational Site Surveys Source: Yano, Rubenstein, Farmer, et al., HSR, 2008, in press.
QUITS Administrative Data Source: Yano, Rubenstein, Farmer, et al., HSR, 2008, in press.
QUITS Patient Surveys * Screened >36,000 primary care patients to identify, enroll >2,000 current smokers. Source: Yano, Rubenstein, Farmer, et al., HSR, 2008, in press.
QUITS Practice Checklist • Smoking cessation expert review of: • Local QI plans (with feedback to practices) • Implementation activities • Completed practice checklist of intervention components • Evidence-based vs. non-evidenced based • Changes from QI plan to implementation
QUITS Post-Implementation Survey * Brief counseling program, computerized referral in PC or counselor/nurse hired in SC clinic Source: Yano, Rubenstein, Farmer, et al., HSR, 2008, in press.
QUITS Post-Implementation Survey Source: Yano, Rubenstein, Farmer, et al., HSR, 2008, in press.
Triangulation • Critical to collect information about implementation from multiple sources • Be prepared for disagreement • Perspectives and opportunities for observation differ for managers, providers vs. patients • Recognize differences between “exposed” sample and practice population • Does the “enrolled” group represent the practice? • Did the intervention penetrate among all providers?