Huguet Nathalie, Hatch Brigit, Sumic Aleksandra, Tillotson Carrie, Hicks Elizabeth, Nelson Joan, DeVoe Jennifer E
From Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR (NH, BH, EH, JED); OCHIN, Inc, Portland (BH, AS, CT, JN, JED).
J Am Board Fam Med. 2018 May-Jun;31(3):410-416. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2018.03.170263.
Health information technology (HIT) provides new opportunities for primary care clinics to support patients with health insurance enrollment and maintenance. We present strategies, early findings, and clinic reflections on the development and implementation of HIT tools designed to streamline and improve health insurance tracking at community health centers.
We are conducting a hybrid implementation-effectiveness trial to assess novel health insurance enrollment and support tools in primary care clinics. Twenty-three clinics in 7 health centers from the OCHIN practice-based research network are participating in the implementation component of the trial. Participating health centers were randomized to 1 of 2 levels of implementation support, including arm 1 (n = 4 health centers, 11 clinic sites) that received HIT tools and educational materials and arm 2 (n = 3 health centers, 12 clinic sites) that received HIT tools, educational materials, and individualized implementation support with a practice coach. We used mixed-methods (qualitative and quantitative) to assess tool use rates and facilitators and barriers to implementation in the first 6 months.
Clinics reported favorable attitudes toward the HIT tools, which replace less efficient and more cumbersome processes, and reflect on the importance of clinic engagement in tool development and refinement. Five of 7 health centers are now regularly using the tools and are actively working to increase tool use. Six months after formal implementation, arm 2 clinics demonstrated higher rates of tool use, compared with arm 1.
These results highlight the value of early clinic input in tool development, the potential benefit of practice coaching during HIT tool development and implementation, and a novel method for coupling a hybrid implementation-effectiveness design with principles of improvement science in primary care research.
健康信息技术(HIT)为初级保健诊所提供了新的机会,以支持患者进行健康保险登记和续保。我们介绍了旨在简化和改善社区卫生中心健康保险跟踪的HIT工具的开发与实施策略、早期发现以及诊所的反馈。
我们正在进行一项混合实施效果试验,以评估初级保健诊所中新型健康保险登记和支持工具。来自OCHIN基于实践的研究网络的7个健康中心的23家诊所参与了试验的实施部分。参与的健康中心被随机分配到2个实施支持级别中的1个,包括第1组(n = 4个健康中心,11个诊所地点),该组接收HIT工具和教育材料;以及第2组(n = 3个健康中心,12个诊所地点),该组接收HIT工具、教育材料以及由实践教练提供的个性化实施支持。我们使用混合方法(定性和定量)来评估前6个月工具的使用率以及实施的促进因素和障碍。
诊所对HIT工具持积极态度,这些工具取代了效率较低且更繁琐的流程,并反思了诊所参与工具开发和完善的重要性。7个健康中心中有5个现在经常使用这些工具,并积极努力提高工具的使用率。正式实施6个月后,与第1组相比,第2组诊所的工具使用率更高。
这些结果突出了诊所早期投入在工具开发中的价值、HIT工具开发和实施过程中实践指导的潜在益处,以及一种将混合实施效果设计与初级保健研究中的改进科学原则相结合的新方法。