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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.
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1 to 3 of 3 Research Studies DisplayedMiller-Rosales C, Rodriguez HP
Interdisciplinary primary care team expertise and diabetes care management.
Researchers examined whether care team role expertise is associated with patients' experiences of chronic care for type 2 diabetes and whether the relationship is stronger for small community health center (CHC) sites. Results of surveys conducted with adults with diabetes that assessed nonphysician team roles involved in managing their chronic care were integrated with clinical and administrative data from 14 CHCs. They found that patients with access to care team expertise in self-management support, including diabetes educators, nutritionists, community health workers, and other general staff report better experiences of chronic care. They concluded that these team roles may reduce barriers to patient self-management and improve patients' overall experiences of chronic care, particularly in small CHC sites.
Citation: Miller-Rosales C, Rodriguez HP .
Interdisciplinary primary care team expertise and diabetes care management.
J Am Board Fam Med 2021 Jan-Feb;34(1):151-61. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2021.01.200187..
Keywords: Primary Care, Diabetes, Teams, Care Management, Community-Based Practice
Holtrop JS, Ruland S, Diaz S
Using social network analysis to examine the effect of care management structure on chronic disease management communication within primary care.
The investigators examined the communication regarding chronic disease care within 24 primary care practices in Michigan and Colorado. They sought to answer the following questions: Do care managers play a key role in chronic disease management in the practice? Does the prominence of the care manager's connectivity within the practice's communication network vary by the type of care management structure implemented? Using surveys, they found that social network analysis provided a useful means of examining chronic disease communication in practice, and highlighted the central role of care managers in this communication when their role structure supported such communication. They concluded that structuring care managers as embedded team members within the practice has important implications for their role in chronic disease communication within primary care.
AHRQ-funded; HS022690.
Citation: Holtrop JS, Ruland S, Diaz S .
Using social network analysis to examine the effect of care management structure on chronic disease management communication within primary care.
J Gen Intern Med 2018 May;33(5):612-20. doi: 10.1007/s11606-017-4247-z.
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Keywords: Care Management, Chronic Conditions, Communication, Primary Care, Teams
Howard HA, Malouin R, Callow-Rucker M
Care managers and knowledge shift in primary care patient-centered medical home transformation.
Based on a health insurance company-sponsored primary care transformation project, this study explores the perceptions of care management from the perspective of providers and practice staff to examine shifts in knowledge and their broader implications for primary care. It demonstrates how the diffusion of clinical power and knowledge production redefine primary care relationships to patients, as traditional hierarchies shift to team-based care.
AHRQ-funded; HS020046; HS01795.
Citation: Howard HA, Malouin R, Callow-Rucker M .
Care managers and knowledge shift in primary care patient-centered medical home transformation.
Hum Organ 2016 Spring;75(1):10-20..
Keywords: Care Management, Patient-Centered Healthcare, Primary Care, Practice Patterns, Teams