National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report
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AHRQ Research Studies Date
Topics
- Chronic Conditions (1)
- Clinician-Patient Communication (1)
- Communication (1)
- Diagnostic Safety and Quality (1)
- Medical Errors (2)
- Medical Liability (1)
- Medication (2)
- Medication: Safety (1)
- Patient-Centered Healthcare (1)
- (-) Patient Safety (7)
- (-) Primary Care (7)
- Provider: Health Personnel (1)
- Quality Improvement (2)
- Quality of Care (1)
- Teams (1)
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 7 of 7 Research Studies DisplayedYoung RA, Gurses AP, Fulda KG
Primary care teams' reported actions to improve medication safety: a qualitative study with insights in high reliability organising.
The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine actions by primary care teams to improve medication safety. During 2019-2020, the researchers utilized one-on-one, semi-structured interviews with 21 primary care physicians and their team members at four primary care sites serving patients with mostly low socioeconomic status in the Southwest United States. The study found that primary care teams described their actions in medication safety primarily in making standard-of-care medical decisions, patient-shared decision-making, educating patients and their caregivers, providing asynchronous care separate from office visits and providing clinical infrastructure. The majority of the actions required individual-level customization, such as restricting the supply of specific medications prescribed and simplifying the medication regimens of specific patients. Primary care teams engaged high reliability organization principles taking steps to improve resilience in patient work systems and by anticipating and moderating risks. The actions of the primary care teams demonstrated their safety organizing efforts as responses to many other agents in multiple settings that they could neither control nor coordinate easily.
AHRQ-funded; HS027277.
Citation: Young RA, Gurses AP, Fulda KG .
Primary care teams' reported actions to improve medication safety: a qualitative study with insights in high reliability organising.
BMJ Open Qual 2023 Sep; 12(3). doi: 10.1136/bmjoq-2023-002350..
Keywords: Medication: Safety, Medication, Primary Care, Patient Safety
Schiff GD, Reyes Nieva H, Griswold P
Addressing ambulatory safety and malpractice: the Massachusetts PROMISES Project.
The researchers assembled a coalition of safety, regulatory, malpractice, and academic groups and recruited 25 primary care practices of which 16 were selected to receive a multifaceted improvement intervention. They describe how they developed and fielded the intervention, delineating some of the lessons learned in the course of the project and implications for future efforts in this field.
AHRQ-funded; HS019508.
Citation: Schiff GD, Reyes Nieva H, Griswold P .
Addressing ambulatory safety and malpractice: the Massachusetts PROMISES Project.
Health Serv Res 2016 Dec;51 Suppl 3:2634-41. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.12621.
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Keywords: Patient Safety, Medical Liability, Primary Care
Walley AY, Green TC
Mainstreaming naloxone through coprescription to patients receiving long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain.
This editorial comments on the Coffin and colleagues' report of the Naloxone for Opioid Safety Evaluation (NOSE) study. The authors concluded that the NOSE study is a substantial step forward in demonstrating the feasibility of coprescription of rescue kits in primary care settings. (Coffin et al., Ann Intern Med. 2016 Aug 16;165(4):245-52.)
AHRQ-funded; HS024021.
Citation: Walley AY, Green TC .
Mainstreaming naloxone through coprescription to patients receiving long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain.
Ann Intern Med 2016 Aug 16;165(4):292-3. doi: 10.7326/m16-1348.
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Keywords: Chronic Conditions, Medication, Patient Safety, Primary Care
Fiscella K, Fogarty C, Salas E
What can primary care learn from sports teams?
The authors used sports teams to illustrate key principles from team science and to extract practical lessons for primary care teams.
AHRQ-funded; HS022440.
Citation: Fiscella K, Fogarty C, Salas E .
What can primary care learn from sports teams?
J Ambul Care Manage 2016 Jul-Sep;39(3):279-85. doi: 10.1097/jac.0000000000000120.
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Keywords: Patient Safety, Primary Care, Quality Improvement, Teams
Al-Mutairi A, Meyer AN, Thomas EJ
Accuracy of the safer Dx instrument to identify diagnostic errors in primary care.
The researchers aimed to test the accuracy of an instrument to help detect presence or absence of diagnostic error through record reviews. They found that their Safer Dx Instrument helped quantify the likelihood of diagnostic error in primary care visits, achieving a high degree of accuracy for measuring their presence or absence.
AHRQ-funded; HS022087.
Citation: Al-Mutairi A, Meyer AN, Thomas EJ .
Accuracy of the safer Dx instrument to identify diagnostic errors in primary care.
J Gen Intern Med 2016 Jun;31(6):602-8. doi: 10.1007/s11606-016-3601-x.
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Keywords: Primary Care, Diagnostic Safety and Quality, Medical Errors, Patient Safety, Quality Improvement
Robinson JD, Tate A, Heritage J
Agenda-setting revisited: when and how do primary-care physicians solicit patients' additional concerns?
The authors assessed the distribution, content, and effectiveness of physicians' post-chief-complaint, agenda-setting questions. They found that physicians' questions designed to solicit concerns additional to chief concerns occurred in only 32% of visits. Further, those that were formatted so as to allow for 'concerns' were significantly more likely to generate some type of agenda item.
AHRQ-funded; HS010922; HS013343.
Citation: Robinson JD, Tate A, Heritage J .
Agenda-setting revisited: when and how do primary-care physicians solicit patients' additional concerns?
Patient Educ Couns 2016 May;99(5):718-23. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2015.12.009.
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Keywords: Communication, Primary Care, Patient-Centered Healthcare, Patient Safety, Clinician-Patient Communication
Rabatin J, Williams E, Baier Manwell L
Predictors and outcomes of burnout in primary care physicians.
This study assessed relationships between primary care work conditions, physician burnout, quality of care, and medical errors. It found that burnout is highly associated with adverse work conditions and a greater intention to leave the practice, but not with adverse patient outcomes. Care quality thus appears to be preserved at great personal cost to primary care physicians.
AHRQ-funded; HS011955.
Citation: Rabatin J, Williams E, Baier Manwell L .
Predictors and outcomes of burnout in primary care physicians.
J Prim Care Community Health 2016 Jan;7(1):41-3. doi: 10.1177/2150131915607799.
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Keywords: Provider: Health Personnel, Primary Care, Medical Errors, Patient Safety, Quality of Care