National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report
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Search All Research Studies
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- Children/Adolescents (1)
- Community-Based Practice (1)
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AHRQ Research Studies
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Research Studies is a compilation of published research articles funded by AHRQ or authored by AHRQ researchers.
Results
1 to 3 of 3 Research Studies DisplayedFraze TK, Lewis VA, Wood A
Configuration and delivery of primary care in rural and urban settings.
This study examined configuration and delivery of rural primary care of Medicare beneficiaries compared to more urban settings. The study included over 27 million participants with qualifying visits who were assigned to practices. The authors characterized practices’ structures, capabilities, and payment reform participation and measured beneficiary utilization by rurality. Rural practices were smaller, more primary care dominant and system owned with more beneficiaries per practice. Rural area beneficiaries were more likely to be from high-poverty areas and disabled. There was less engagement in quality-focused payment programs than in metropolitan practices. There was less preventive care, such as fewer beneficiaries with diabetes receiving an eye exam, fewer mammograms, and higher overall and condition-specific readmissions. While most isolated beneficiaries traveled to more urban practices for outpatient care, those receiving care in rural practices had similar outpatient and inpatient utilization to urban counterparts except for readmissions and quality metrics that rely on services outside of primary care.
AHRQ-funded; HS024075.
Citation: Fraze TK, Lewis VA, Wood A .
Configuration and delivery of primary care in rural and urban settings.
J Gen Intern Med 2022 Sep;37(12):3045-53. doi: 10.1007/s11606-022-07472-x..
Keywords: Primary Care, Healthcare Delivery, Rural Health, Urban Health, Medicare
Fiori K, Patel M, Sanderson D
From policy statement to practice: integrating social needs screening and referral assistance with community health workers in an urban academic health center.
The authors described their experience implementing a novel social needs screening program at an academic pediatric clinic. They found that, on average, 76% of providers had their patients screened on more than half of eligible well-child visits. Their experience suggested that screening for social needs at well-child visits is feasible as part of routine primary care. They recommended that success would best be achieved by leveraging resources, obtaining provider buy-in, and defining program components to sustain activities.
AHRQ-funded; HS026396.
Citation: Fiori K, Patel M, Sanderson D .
From policy statement to practice: integrating social needs screening and referral assistance with community health workers in an urban academic health center.
J Prim Care Community Health 2019 Jan-Dec;10:2150132719899207. doi: 10.1177/2150132719899207..
Keywords: Children/Adolescents, Community-Based Practice, Healthcare Delivery, Implementation, Screening, Social Determinants of Health, Urban Health, Workflow, Primary Care
Quigley DD, Predmore ZS, Chen AY
Implementation and sequencing of practice transformation in urban practices with underserved patients.
Researchers conducted interviews at 14 primary care practices undergoing patient-centered medical home (PCMH) transformation in a large urban federally qualified health center in California and used grounded theory to identify common themes and patterns. They concluded that full PCMH transformation took time and effort and relied on a sequential approach, with an early focus on foundational changes that included use of a robust quality improvement strategy.
AHRQ-funded; HS000029.
Citation: Quigley DD, Predmore ZS, Chen AY .
Implementation and sequencing of practice transformation in urban practices with underserved patients.
Qual Manag Health Care 2017 Jan/Mar;26(1):7-14. doi: 10.1097/qmh.0000000000000118.
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Keywords: Patient-Centered Healthcare, Urban Health, Vulnerable Populations, Practice Improvement, Organizational Change, Quality Improvement, Quality of Care, Primary Care, Healthcare Delivery, Implementation, Teams