Chapter 2. AHRQ's Research Portfolio

AHRQ research priorities are user-driven, and the Agency actively responds to the needs of its customers. The Agency receives input and feedback through the National Advisory Council, meetings with stakeholder groups, Federal Register notices, and comments submitted by the public through AHRQ's Web site at www.ahrq.gov.

The Agency carries out a variety of activities to accomplish its research mission. Together, these activities build the infrastructure, tools, and knowledge for measurable improvements in America's health care system. Researchers—including grantees, contractors, and intramural investigators—build on the foundation laid by biomedical researchers who have determined which interventions can work under ideal circumstances. Knowing that these interventions work is only a first step. We also need to know if they are effective in everyday practice and in which circumstances they work, for whom they work and don't work, and other critical information to make sure that the interventions are used appropriately and efficiently to improve patients' health.

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Opportunities for Research

Almost 80 percent of AHRQ's funding supports research that is conducted at universities, in clinical settings such as hospitals and doctor's offices, and in health care organizations. AHRQ makes funding awards through targeted program announcements on particular research projects or to researchers with innovative ideas that propose to help improve health care in America.

In FY 2004, we implemented a new policy of inclusion of priority populations in the research we fund. Priority populations include low-income groups, minority groups, women, children, the elderly, and individuals with special health care needs, including individuals with disabilities, and individuals who need chronic care or end-of-life health care. New in 2004, prospective grantees are required to discuss plans to include priority populations within the context of their scientific objectives and research methods. The goal of this policy is to ensure that the Agency's overall research portfolio includes priority populations.

Innovative Research: Addressing Current and Emerging Challenges

The topics addressed by innovative research proposals reflect timely issues and ideas from top health services researchers. AHRQ uses Program Announcements (PAs) to invite applications and communicate the Agency's priorities for new and ongoing research topics. Examples of new and ongoing FY 2004 PAs include:

In FY 2004, AHRQ joined with other sponsors to fund and support the following projects:

The following summaries are representative of new projects funded in FY 2004 that are focused on well-defined research areas or topics:

Selected Examples of Recent Findings from AHRQ-Funded Research

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Building the Research Infrastructure

AHRQ believes that future improvements in health care depend in large part on the investments we make today in the research infrastructure. Health services researchers focus on some of the most complex and challenging issues currently affecting health care in the United States, and training new investigators is fundamental to producing the next generation of health services researchers. AHRQ supports an array of intramural and extramural predoctoral and postdoctoral educational, research infrastructure, and career development grants and opportunities in health services research. In addition, the Agency supports the development of health services research infrastructure in emerging centers of excellence and works with Federal and academic partners to develop innovative curricula and educational models.

The following is a list of training programs and support mechanisms for new health services research investigators:

Health Services Research Dissertation Awards

AHRQ supports research undertaken as part of an academic program to qualify for a doctorate. The AHRQ dissertation award supports dissertation research costs of students in accredited research doctoral programs in the United States (including Puerto Rico and other U.S. Territories or possessions). The dissertation will focus on areas relevant to health services research, with emphasis placed on methodological and research topics that address the mission of AHRQ.

Independent Scientist Awards

AHRQ sponsors Independent Scientist Awards in health services research, which are "Research Career Awards" intended to foster the development of promising new investigators in the field. Individual awards support newly independent scientists who can demonstrate a need for a period of intensive research focus.

Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Awards (K08)

AHRQ sponsors the Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Award in health services research. Support is provided for the development of outstanding clinician research scientists who are committed to a career in health services research, with a focus on development as an independent scientist.

National Research Service Award (NRSA) Program

The NRSA program, which supports the training of over 150 investigators annually, provides institutional training grants to academic institutions to develop health services research training opportunities across the Nation. The purpose of the NRSA program is to help ensure that adequate numbers of highly trained individuals are available to carry out the Nation's health services research agenda in order to improve quality of health care, assure value for health dollars spent, and enhance access to services. One goal is to equip students with the necessary knowledge, skills, and experiences to conduct future research which will meet the needs of patients, providers, health care plans, purchasers, and/or policymakers. NRSA institutional training grants assist these programmatically diverse domestic institutions in supporting predoctoral and postdoctoral academic training by providing support for student stipends and tuition.

Predoctoral Fellowship Awards For Minority Students

AHRQ sponsors predoctoral fellowship awards for minority students. Designed to enhance racial and ethnic diversity in the health services research sciences, this fellowship provides up to 5 years of support for research training leading to the Ph.D. or equivalent research degree; the combined M.D./Ph.D. degree; or other combined professional and research doctoral degrees. Support is not available for individuals enrolled in a medical or other professional school program unless it is a combined professional doctorate/Ph.D. degree program.

Building Research Infrastructure and Capacity (BRIC) Program

The Building Research Infrastructure and Capacity (BRIC) program is a merit-based, peer-reviewed program in response to Congressional intent to broaden geographic distribution of health services research funding among institutions located in States where the success rate for applications to the AHRQ has historically been low. BRIC-eligible States included all states that have received less than $3 million dollars in AHRQ support over the 5-year time span of 1999-2003.

AHRQ originally funded six Phase I BRIC awards in FY 2001. Ten States received over $1.7 million in 2-year planning grants: Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Jersey, Utah, and a consortium involving Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah and Wyoming. Support for Phase 1 of the projects ended in FY 2002. The second phase of the BRIC program was limited to the original recipients of the initial BRIC planning grants. Phase II provided additional support for the refinement, expansion, and implementation of plans developed among grantees supported in Phase I, including resources to conduct pilot research projects.

Minority Research Infrastructure Support Program (M-RISP)

The M-RISP is designed to broaden the capacity of academic institutions predominantly or substantially serving minority racial and ethnic minority populations and the faculty at these institutions to conduct health services research. These awards provide grant support to strengthen the research environments of minority institutions and their ability to conduct research in health services that has the capacity to be disseminated, implemented, and translated into practice and policy.

The M-RISP provides support for two types of primary activities:

  1. Institutional research development support to strengthen the institutional infrastructure and enhance the capability of individual faculty members to undertake health services research.
  2. Individual investigator-initiated research project support for developing research scientists to conduct small grant research activities that can lead to successful applications for funding under regular health services research grant mechanisms.

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Ongoing Research

Examples of research grants funded in FY2004 under these training programs and support mechanisms include the following:

A Qualitative Description of Enrollment in PACE. The Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE), a comprehensive community based long-term care programs, provides cost effective comprehensive care for elders with the goal of promoting independence and minimizing institutionalization. The purpose of this qualitative study is to describe enrollment in a PACE from the perspective of elders, families, informal caregivers, and providers, with specific focus on the following questions: What is enrollment in a PACE? When, how, and why do elders enroll in PACE? What events contribute or lead to enrollment in PACE from the perspectives of elders, families, informal caregivers, and providers of health and social services?

Using an EMR to Improve Urban Child Health. Researchers are using an electronic medical record (EMR) in a network of urban primary care centers to:

  1. Describe the content and quality of EMR-based urban child and adolescent primary care.
  2. Evaluate the efficacy of evidence-enhanced audit and feedback to improve the delivery of multiple primary care services.
  3. Describe the perceptions of primary care clinicians and quality improvement strategies used after they receive practice-based audit and feedback.
  4. Evaluate incremental improvements in quality following the addition of point-of-care decision support to improve the delivery of multiple primary care services.
  5. Describe the perceptions of primary care clinicians following receipt of point-of-care decision support.

Capacity Building in Organizational Research. Researchers are investigating organizational/management science and its measurement and applying these results to the submission of a systems-directed intervention that seeks to improve patient safety and decrease medical errors. The practice-based research and organizational assessment products developed in this project will produce information that:

  1. Is relevant and useful to health care policymakers, payers, providers, and consumers.
  2. Can be applied in other health care organizational settings.
  3. Will help address AHRQ's response to challenges of organizational research.

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