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Practice Facilitation to Improve Diabetes Care in Primary Care: A Report From the EPIC Randomized Clinical Trial
Authors:W Perry Dickinson  L Miriam Dickinson  Paul A Nutting  Caroline B Emsermann  Brandon Tutt  Benjamin F Crabtree  Lawrence Fisher  Marjie Harbrecht  Allyson Gottsman  David R West
Institution:1.Department of Family Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado;2.Clinical Research Strategies, Denver, Colorado;3.Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey;4.Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California;5.Health TeamWorks, Lakewood, Colorado
Abstract:

PURPOSE

We investigated 3 approaches for implementing the Chronic Care Model to improve diabetes care: (1) practice facilitation over 6 months using a reflective adaptive process (RAP) approach; (2) practice facilitation for up to 18 months using a continuous quality improvement (CQI) approach; and (3) providing self-directed (SD) practices with model information and resources, without facilitation.

METHODS

We conducted a cluster-randomized trial, called Enhancing Practice, Improving Care (EPIC), that compared these approaches among 40 small to midsized primary care practices. At baseline and 9 months and 18 months after enrollment, we assessed practice diabetes quality measures from chart audits and Practice Culture Assessment scores from clinician and staff surveys.

RESULTS

Although measures of the quality of diabetes care improved in all 3 groups (all P <.05), improvement was greater in CQI practices compared with both SD practices (P <.0001) and RAP practices (P <.0001); additionally, improvement was greater in SD practices compared with RAP practices (P <.05). In RAP practices, Change Culture scores showed a trend toward improvement at 9 months (P = .07) but decreased below baseline at 18 months (P <.05), while Work Culture scores decreased from 9 to 18 months (P <.05). Both scores were stable over time in SD and CQI practices.

CONCLUSIONS

Traditional CQI interventions are effective at improving measures of the quality of diabetes care, but may not improve practice change and work culture. Short-term practice facilitation based on RAP principles produced less improvement in quality measures than CQI or SD interventions and also did not produce sustained improvements in practice culture.
Keywords:primary health care  family medicine  patient-centered medical home  quality improvement  practice facilitation  diabetes mellitus  practice-based research
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