• Quality in primary care · Jan 2011

    Building high functioning clinical teams through quality improvement initiatives.

    • Thomas P O'Toole, Richard Cabral, Jonathan M Blumen, and Dawna A Blake.
    • Chief, Primary Care, Providence VA Medical Center, Providence, RI, USA. thomas.o'toole@va.gov
    • Qual Prim Care. 2011 Jan 1;19(1):13-22.

    BackgroundTeam-based care has consistently been associated with improved clinical outcomes. However, strategies for promoting and sustaining a team-based approach in family medicine practice are more elusive.MethodsWe conducted a longitudinal time series cohort study of 30 primary care providers in seven practices to assess the sequential addition of three different chronic disease management feedback reports over 24 months, culminating in a team-based quality improvement intervention linked to feedback, assessing clinical performance and self-reported effectiveness.ResultsThe proportion of patients at their low density lipoprotein target (<100 mg/dL) improved over the 24-month study period (P<0.001) but the rate of clinical improvement was more modest when feedback data were only presented at an individual and at a team level. When feedback reports were linked to a team-based quality improvement intervention, the results were more robust and were sustained for 12 months following the intervention cycle. Surveyed clinicians reported that the individual and team reports impacted both on their own practice approach and on team functioning.ConclusionsThese findings suggest a strategic role for clinical performance feedback linked to team initiated quality improvement initiatives for improving both clinical outcomes and clinical team-based care.

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