Arora Sanjeev, Geppert Cynthia M A, Kalishman Summers, Dion Denise, Pullara Frank, Bjeletich Barbara, Simpson Gary, Alverson Dale C, Moore Lori B, Kuhl Dave, Scaletti Joseph V
Department of Medicine, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131-0001, USA.
Acad Med. 2007 Feb;82(2):154-60. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31802d8f68.
The authors describe an innovative academic health center (AHC)-led program of health care delivery and clinical education for the management of complex, common, and chronic diseases in underserved areas, using hepatitis C virus (HCV) as a model. The program, based at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, represents a paradigm shift in thinking and funding for the threefold mission of AHCs, moving from traditional fee-for-service models to public health funding of knowledge networks. This program, Project Extension for Community Health care Outcomes (ECHO), involves a partnership of academic medicine, public health offices, corrections departments, and rural community clinics dedicated to providing best practices and protocol-driven health care in rural areas. Telemedicine and Internet connections enable specialists in the program to comanage patients with complex diseases, using case-based knowledge networks and learning loops. Project ECHO partners (nurse practitioners, primary care physicians, physician assistants, and pharmacists) present HCV-positive patients during weekly two-hour telemedicine clinics using a standardized, case-based format that includes discussion of history, physical examination, test results, treatment complications, and psychiatric, medical, and substance abuse issues. In these case-based learning clinics, partners rapidly gain deep domain expertise in HCV as they collaborate with university specialists in hepatology, infectious disease, psychiatry, and substance abuse in comanaging their patients. Systematic monitoring of treatment outcomes is an integral aspect of the project. The authors believe this methodology will be generalizable to other complex and chronic conditions in a wide variety of underserved areas to improve disease outcomes, and it offers an opportunity for AHCs to enhance and expand their traditional mission of teaching, patient care, and research.
作者描述了一个由创新型学术健康中心(AHC)主导的医疗服务和临床教育项目,该项目以丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)为模型,用于管理服务不足地区的复杂、常见和慢性疾病。该项目以新墨西哥大学医学院为基地,代表了AHCs三重使命在思维和资金方面的范式转变,从传统的按服务收费模式转向对知识网络的公共卫生资金投入。这个名为社区医疗结果项目拓展(ECHO)的项目,涉及学术医学、公共卫生办公室、惩教部门和农村社区诊所的合作,致力于在农村地区提供最佳实践和基于协议的医疗服务。远程医疗和互联网连接使该项目的专家能够利用基于案例的知识网络和学习循环,共同管理患有复杂疾病的患者。ECHO项目的合作伙伴(执业护士、初级保健医生、医师助理和药剂师)在每周两小时的远程医疗诊所中,以标准化的、基于案例的形式介绍HCV阳性患者,内容包括病史讨论、体格检查、检测结果、治疗并发症以及精神、医疗和药物滥用问题。在这些基于案例的学习诊所中,合作伙伴在与大学肝病学、传染病学、精神病学和药物滥用方面的专家共同管理患者的过程中,迅速获得了关于HCV的深入专业知识。对治疗结果的系统监测是该项目不可或缺的一部分。作者认为,这种方法可推广到各种服务不足地区的其他复杂和慢性疾病,以改善疾病治疗效果,并且为AHCs提供了一个机会来加强和扩大其传统的教学、患者护理和研究使命。