AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on improving chronic disease management in primary care by monitoring quality indicators and emphasizes the challenges of implementing informatics tools.
  • The objective was to identify key success factors for effectively translating clinical knowledge into practice, examining positive deviant cases through interviews and observations.
  • The findings revealed that a web-based chronic disease management toolkit was essential, along with six other critical factors, to successfully enhance patient care practices within a collaborative of primary care physicians.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Improvement of chronic disease management in primary care entails monitoring indicators of quality over time and across patients and practices. Informatics tools are needed, yet implementing them remains challenging.

Objective: To identify critical success factors enabling the translation of clinical and operational knowledge about effective and efficient chronic care management into primary care practice.

Design: A prospective case study of positive deviants using key informant interviews, process observation, and document review.

Setting: A chronic disease management (CDM) collaborative of primary care physicians with documented improvement in adherence to clinical practice guidelines using a web-based patient registry system with CDM guideline-based flow sheet.

Participants: Thirty community-based physician participants using predominantly paper records, plus a project management team including the physician lead, project manager, evaluator and support team.

Analysis: A critical success factor (CSF) analysis of necessary and sufficient pathways to the translation of knowledge into clinical practice.

Results: A web-based CDM 'toolkit' was found to be a direct CSF that allowed this group of physicians to improve their practice by tracking patient care processes using evidence-based clinical practice guideline-based flow sheets. Moreover, the information and communication technology 'factor' was sufficient for success only as part of a set of seven direct CSF components including: health delivery system enhancements, organizational partnerships, funding mechanisms, project management, practice models, and formal knowledge translation practices. Indirect factors that orchestrated success through the direct factor components were also identified. A central insight of this analysis is that a comprehensive quality improvement model was the CSF that drew this set of factors into a functional framework for successful knowledge translation.

Conclusions: In complex primary care settings environment where physicians have low adoption rates of electronic tools to support the care of patients with chronic conditions, successful implementation may require a set of interrelated system and technology factors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2006.05.042DOI Listing

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