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Annals of family medicine · May 2005
Multicenter StudyEvaluation of a quality improvement collaborative in asthma care: does it improve processes and outcomes of care?
- Matthias Schonlau, Rita Mangione-Smith, Kitty S Chan, Joan Keesey, Mayde Rosen, Thomas A Louis, Shin-Yi Wu, and Emmett Keeler.
- RAND Health, Santa Monica, Calif., USA. matt@rand.org <matt@rand.org>
- Ann Fam Med. 2005 May 1; 3 (3): 200208200-8.
PurposeWe wanted to examine whether a collaborative to improve asthma care influences process and outcomes of care in asthmatic adults.MethodWe undertook a preintervention-postintervention evaluation of 185 patients in 6 intervention clinics and 3 matched control sites that participated in the Institute for Healthcare Improvement Breakthrough Series (BTS) Collaborative for asthma care. The intervention consisted of 3, 2-day educational sessions for teams dispatched by participating sites, which were followed by 3 action periods during the course of a year.ResultsOverall process of asthma care improved significantly in the intervention compared with the control group (change of 10% vs 1%, P = .003). Patients in the intervention group were more likely to attend educational sessions (20% vs 5%, P = .03). Having a written action plan, setting goals, monitoring peak flow rates, and using long-term asthma medications increased between 2% and 19% (not significant), but asthma-related knowledge was unchanged for the 2 groups. Patients in the BTS Collaborative were significantly more likely to be satisfied with clinician and lay educator communication (62% vs 39%, P = .02). Health-related quality of life, asthma-specific quality of life, number of bed days caused by asthma-related illness, and acute care service use were not significantly different between the 2 groups.ConclusionsThe intervention was associated with improved process-of-care measures that have been linked with better outcomes. Patients benefited through increased satisfaction with communication. Follow-up of patients who participated in the intervention may have been too brief to be able to detect significant improvement in health-related outcomes.
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