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.
Return to Contents
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:
- AHRQ Health Services Research Grants. This program provides support for projects
focused on improvements in health outcomes, and enhanced decisionmaking at
all levels of the health care system. Findings from these projects will increase our
understanding of what works, for whom, when, and at what cost. Research funded
by this PA will strengthen quality measurement and improvement, and identify
strategies to improve access, foster appropriate use, and reduce unnecessary
expenditures.
- Practice-based Research Networks (PBRNs) and the Translation of Research into
Practice. Projects funded under this program are evaluating scientifically based
strategies for translating evidence into sustainable improvements in clinical
practice and developing, improving, and/or validating research dissemination
methods applicable to cancer control in primary care practice. Researchers will
assess the conditions under which the strategies being tested can be expected to be
sustainable, can be rapidly transferred or adapted to other primary care settings,
and can lead to demonstrable improvements in the quality of care and/or patient
outcomes.
- Building the Evidence to Promote Bioterrorism and Other Public Health
Emergency Preparedness in Health Care Systems. These grants are examining and
promoting the health care system's readiness for a bioterrorist event and other
public health emergencies through the development of new evidence, tools, and
models. Specific focus is being given to emergency preparedness of hospitals and
health care systems for bioterrorism and other public health emergencies,
enhanced capacity needs of ambulatory care, home and long-term care, care of
psychosocial consequences, and other related services. Researchers are also
assessing information technology linkages and emerging communication
networks to improve communication in the health care system, emergency
response networks, and public health agencies. They are also exploring novel uses
of health care system training strategies that can prepare community clinicians to
recognize and manage bioterrorist events and other public health emergencies.
- Translating Research into Practice (TRIP). This is a collaborative effort between
AHRQ and the Health Services Research and Development Service within the
Department of Veterans Affairs. Researchers are implementing innovative and
rigorous research and evaluation projects related to the translation of research
findings into measurable improvements in quality; patient safety; health care
outcomes; and cost, use, and access. Two specific priorities for these projects are to:
- Compare the use of interventions to translate research into practice across different health care systems.
- Measure the impact of translation activities and interventions that foster measurable and sustainable quality and patient safety improvement or consistent quality and patient safety at a lower cost.
In FY 2004, AHRQ joined with other sponsors to fund and support the following
projects:
- Understanding and Promoting Health Literacy. The goal of these projects is to
increase scientific understanding of the nature of health literacy and its
relationship to healthy behaviors, illness prevention and treatment, chronic
disease management, health disparities, risk assessment of environmental factors,
and health outcomes, including mental and oral health. Researchers are focusing
on interventions that can strengthen health literacy and improve communication
between health care and public health professionals (including dentists, health
care delivery organizations, and public health entities) and consumers and
patients.
- Research Partnerships for Improving Functional Outcomes. These projects are
focused on biological, behavioral, medical, and/or psychosocial problems related
to the rehabilitation or health maintenance of individuals with acute or chronic
disease. Researchers are developing and testing the efficacy of symptom-focused or
holistic/integrated therapies for high-prevalence conditions causing disability, such
as low back pain, stroke, hearing loss, vision loss, and congestive heart failure and
for lower prevalence conditions with high levels of comorbidity, such as spinal
cord injury and spina bifida.
- Colorectal Cancer Screening in Primary Care Practice. The purpose of these grants
is to develop innovative research projects to increase the knowledge base for
enhanced translation of effective colorectal cancer screening techniques into
community practice. Researchers are developing interventions, mechanisms, and
systems to monitor and improve compliance with recommendations for colorectal
cancer screening and followup, including tracking procedures such as
sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy. Other projects are evaluating how the risk for
colorectal cancer is assessed in the primary care setting and proposing strategies to
improve informed and shared decisionmaking between physicians and patients
regarding colorectal cancer screening options.
- Studies of the Economics of Cancer Prevention, Screening, and Care. The purpose
of these grants is to increase our knowledge about the economic aspects of cancer
prevention screening, and care, including the economic burden to the patient,
family, and society resulting from cancer and cancer treatment. The overall goal of
this initiative is to enhance the state-of-the-science on the quality of cancer care
and inform Federal decisionmaking on care delivery, coverage, and regulation to
help formulate effective health care policy related to cancer prevention and
control.
- Cancer Surveillance Using Health Claims-Based Data Systems. Investigators are
assessing patterns of care, quality and outcomes of care, and health disparities
across the continuum of treatment. Researchers are also looking at the intensity
and types of services provided at the end of life, short-term complications
following cancer treatment, and long-term complications for cancer survivors that
result from their cancer treatment.
- Screening and Intervention for Youth in Primary Care Settings. This research
project is focused on expanding the role of primary care in the prevention and
treatment of drug abuse and related health problems among youth in the predependency
phase of drug use. Researchers are developing, testing, and refining
screening/assessment instruments to be embedded into comprehensive behavioral
health assessments for use in primary care settings to screen for and assess drug
use. The emphasis is on tools that are simple, brief, easy-to-use, have optimum
levels of sensitivity and specificity, and can be administered by a variety of health
care providers. These projects are also evaluating the effect that drug abuse
screening tools have on primary care providers' ability to recognize patient
problems and intervene accordingly.
- Translational Research for the Prevention and Control of Diabetes. The goals of
these projects are to translate recent advances in the prevention and treatment of
type 1 or type 2 diabetes into clinical practice for individuals and communities at
risk. Researchers are developing and testing improved methods of health care
delivery to patients with or at risk of diabetes, improved methods of diabetes self-management
especially among underserved and minority populations, and cost-effective,
community-based strategies to promote healthy lifestyles that will reduce
the risk of diabetes and obesity.
The following summaries are representative of new projects funded in FY 2004 that
are focused on well-defined research areas or topics:
- Improving Diabetes Efforts Across Language and Literacy (IDEALL). The goal of
this project is to expand exposure to self-management support strategies for
patients and providers within the Community Health Network of San Francisco.
Researchers will examine the extent of patient participation, engagement with the
interventions, changes in diabetes indices, and relative resource use.
- Expanding Surge Capacity Through Use of Former (Shuttered or Converted)
Hospitals. This project is assessing the required planning/preparedness needed for
hospital use in the Boston area during a major man-made or natural disaster. The
researchers will evaluate ways to augment hospital bed capacity, assure sufficient
numbers of trained medical personnel and pharmaceutical supplies, expand
national disaster medical systems capabilities, and test models to set surge
requirements.
- Health Care System Preparedness and Surge Capacity for Bioterrorism and Public
Health Emergencies. The goal of this project is to produce a planning guide for
hospital and health system administrators to help them understand and
operationalize regional preparedness plans for emergencies that result in large
numbers of casualties.
- Hospital Adoption of the National Quality Forum Safe Practices. For this project,
researchers will examine 30 health care safe practices in actual clinical
environments and assess challenges to their implementation, costs and benefits,
types of support and resources and tools necessary for successful implementation,
and any association and/or correlation between the implementation of safe
practices and improved clinical outcomes.
- Root Cause Analyses of Precursor Events Using an Electronic Reporting System.
Researchers are testing existing assumptions that the underlying causes and
contributing factors for three types of medical errors are the same, similar, or have
no relationship by examining their root causes. They will further test whether this
similarity is associated with the severity of potential or actual patient safety events
and whether such associations vary by Structured Abstract.
- Translating Data to Information: Development of Reporting Template for the
AHRQ Quality Indicators (QIs). This project provides support for development and
testing of reporting templates for all QIs, Prevention QIs, Inpatient QIs, and the
Patient Safety Indicators for consumers, purchasers, policymakers, and health care
providers. Researchers also will evaluate an existing program that has used the
AHRQ QIs for public reporting and pay for performance. Findings from this project
will be incorporated into the QI software thus providing QI users with ready access
to recommended reporting templates.
- Development of Curricula to Train Users in the Application of the Quality
Indicators (QI) and the Interpretation of QI Output. This project will develop
training curricula for use of AHRQ's QIs. These modules and related
documentation are intended for use by stakeholder audiences including Federal
and State agencies, hospital associations, health care systems, purchasers, and
payers interested in applying these standardized, scientifically based quality
indicators to their data.
Selected Examples of Recent Findings from AHRQ-Funded Research
- More widespread use of beta-blockers to treat patients with heart failure would
result in lower costs to Medicare. A decision model developed by the Duke Center
for Education and Research on Therapeutics estimated the costs to Medicare of
treating heart failure per-person over a 5-year period were:
- Without beta-blocker $39,739.
- With beta-blocker $33,675 a savings of $6,000 per patient.
- Concurrent use of erythromycin with antifungal agents, certain calcium-channel
blockers, and some antidepressant drugs (which inhibit CYP3A—a substance that
helps the body metabolize erythromycin) should be avoided. AHRQ-funded
researchers found that patients who took erythromycin with drugs that strongly
inhibit the action of CYP3A had a substantially elevated risk of sudden death from
cardiac causes.
- About two-thirds of chronically ill adults never tell their doctors that they don't
take their medications because of high costs. Study results indicate that patients
were most likely to find their clinicians helpful if the clinicians provided free
samples, asked about problems paying for prescriptions, and offered advice about
how to pay for current regimens.
- Nearly half of pregnant women who receive medications other than vitamins may
be taking drugs that the Food and Drug Administration classifies as having no
human evidence of safety for use during pregnancy or that evidence has shown
can harm a developing fetus. A study conducted by researchers at AHRQ's HMO
Research Network CERT found that 64 percent of women were dispensed a
medication other than a vitamin or mineral supplement within the 270 days prior
to delivery. Of those, nearly 40 percent of women were dispensed a drug for which
human safety has not been established (Category C on the FDA's list). Nearly 5
percent were dispensed drugs from Category D, which the FDA classifies as having
positive evidence of fetal risk but also having benefits of use that may be
acceptable despite the risk. An additional 5 percent of women were dispensed a
drug from Category X, for which the evidence indicates definite fetal risks based
on human or animal studies or based on human experience, and the risk of using
the drugs clearly outweighs any possible benefit.
Return to Contents
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:
- Institutional research development support to strengthen the institutional infrastructure and enhance the capability of individual faculty members to undertake health services research.
- 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.
Return to Contents
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:
- Describe the content and quality of EMR-based urban child and adolescent primary care.
- Evaluate the efficacy of evidence-enhanced audit and feedback to improve the delivery of multiple primary care services.
- Describe the perceptions of primary care clinicians and quality improvement strategies used after they receive practice-based audit and feedback.
- Evaluate incremental improvements in quality following the addition of point-of-care decision support to improve the delivery of multiple primary care services.
- 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:
- Is relevant and useful to health care policymakers, payers, providers, and consumers.
- Can be applied in other health care organizational settings.
- Will help address AHRQ's response to challenges of organizational research.
Return to Contents
Proceed to Next Section