National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report
Latest available findings on quality of and access to health care
Data
- Data Infographics
- Data Visualizations
- Data Tools
- Data Innovations
- All-Payer Claims Database
- Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP)
- Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS)
- AHRQ Quality Indicator Tools for Data Analytics
- State Snapshots
- United States Health Information Knowledgebase (USHIK)
- Data Sources Available from AHRQ
Search All Research Studies
AHRQ Research Studies Date
Topics
- (-) Ambulatory Care and Surgery (4)
- Caregiving (1)
- Care Management (1)
- Children/Adolescents (2)
- Chronic Conditions (1)
- (-) Clinician-Patient Communication (4)
- Communication (2)
- Education: Patient and Caregiver (1)
- Electronic Health Records (EHRs) (1)
- Health Information Technology (HIT) (1)
- Medication (1)
- Opioids (1)
- Pain (1)
- Patient Experience (1)
- Primary Care (1)
- Primary Care: Models of Care (1)
- Provider (2)
- Provider: Physician (1)
- Quality Improvement (2)
- Shared Decision Making (1)
AHRQ Research Studies
Sign up: AHRQ Research Studies Email updates
Research Studies is a compilation of published research articles funded by AHRQ or authored by AHRQ researchers.
Results
1 to 4 of 4 Research Studies DisplayedIke B, Baldwin LM, Sutton S
Staff and clinician work-life perceptions after implementing systems-based improvements to opioid management.
The authors assessed the impact of implementing the Six Building Blocks on the work-life of primary care providers and staff. Six rural and rural-serving primary care organizations implemented the Six Building Blocks, with assistance from practice facilitators, clinical experts, and informatics specialists. The authors found that clinicians and staff reported improvement in their work-life after implementing the Six Building Blocks Program to improve opioid medication management and recommended further research on patient experiences specific to practice redesign programs.
AHRQ-funded; HS023750.
Citation: Ike B, Baldwin LM, Sutton S .
Staff and clinician work-life perceptions after implementing systems-based improvements to opioid management.
J Am Board Fam Med 2019 Sep-Oct;32(5):715-23. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2019.05.190027.
.
.
Keywords: Opioids, Pain, Chronic Conditions, Primary Care: Models of Care, Primary Care, Care Management, Ambulatory Care and Surgery, Quality Improvement, Medication, Provider, Clinician-Patient Communication
Grout RW, Cheng ER, Aalsma MC
Let them speak for themselves: improving adolescent self-report rate on pre-visit screening.
This study examined the effect of an automated alert during electronic pre-visit electronic tablet screening on the adolescent self-report rate at pediatric ambulatory clinics. The goal was to increase self-reporting as opposed to parents or caregivers filling out the screening information.bAn interventional study was conducted over a 16 month period. Preintervention rates were low for adolescents, with parents or caregivers completing the pre-visit reports at a high rate. After intervention, self-reporting by younger adolescents nearly doubled and among older adolescents the stable baseline rate of 53.6% increased by 9.2 absolute percentage points.
AHRQ-funded; HS017939; HS018453; HS020640; HS022681.
Citation: Grout RW, Cheng ER, Aalsma MC .
Let them speak for themselves: improving adolescent self-report rate on pre-visit screening.
Acad Pediatr 2019 Jul;19(5):581-88. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2019.04.010..
Keywords: Children/Adolescents, Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Health Information Technology (HIT), Ambulatory Care and Surgery, Communication, Clinician-Patient Communication
Links AR, Callon W, Wasserman C
Surgeon use of medical jargon with parents in the outpatient setting.
This study analyzed the use of unexplained medical jargon with parents whose children have sleep-disordered breathing and their consultations with otolaryngologists in a pediatric surgical setting. Participants (64 parents and 8 otolaryngologists) completed questionnaires that evaluated demographics, clinical features and parental role in decision-making. Unexplained medical jargon was commonly used by physicians (mean total utterances per visit = 28.9) while parents used jargon a mean of 4.3 times. Clinicians used more jargon when they felt that parents had greater involvement in decision-making or when parents used more jargon themselves. These results will be incorporated into communication training for clinicians.
AHRQ-funded; HS022932.
Citation: Links AR, Callon W, Wasserman C .
Surgeon use of medical jargon with parents in the outpatient setting.
Patient Educ Couns 2019 Jun;102(6):1111-18. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2019.02.002..
Keywords: Ambulatory Care and Surgery, Caregiving, Children/Adolescents, Clinician-Patient Communication, Communication, Shared Decision Making, Education: Patient and Caregiver, Provider, Provider: Physician
Grob R, Schlesinger M, Barre LR
What words convey: the potential for patient narratives to inform quality improvement.
This article explored the potential of systematically elicited narratives about experiences with outpatient care to enrich quality improvement. The authors concluded that attention to patient experience and rigorously elicited narratives hold substantial promise for improving quality and patients' experiences with care by making concrete what went wrong or right in domains covered by existing surveys, and by expanding our view of what aspects of care matter to patients as articulated in their own words and thus how care can be made more patient-centered.
AHRQ-funded; HS016978; HS016980; HS021858.
Citation: Grob R, Schlesinger M, Barre LR .
What words convey: the potential for patient narratives to inform quality improvement.
Milbank Q 2019 Mar;97(1):176-227. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12374..
Keywords: Ambulatory Care and Surgery, Clinician-Patient Communication, Patient Experience, Quality Improvement