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Joy and Challenges in Improving Chronic Illness Care: Capturing Daily Experiences of Academic Primary Care Teams
Authors:Julie K. Johnson  Donna M. Woods  David P. Stevens  Judith L. Bowen  Lloyd P. Provost  Connie S. Sixta  Ed H. Wagner
Affiliation:1.Centre for Clinical Governance Research, Faculty of Medicine,University of New South Wales,Sydney,Australia;2.Feinberg School of Medicine,Northwestern University,Chicago,USA;3.The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice,Hanover,USA;4.Oregon Health & Science University,Portland,USA;5.Associates in Process Improvement,Austin,USA;6.Sixta Consulting, Inc.,Houston,USA;7.MacColl Institute for Healthcare Innovation, Group Health Center for Health Studies,Seattle,USA
Abstract:

BACKGROUND

Two chronic care collaboratives (The National Collaborative and the California Collaborative) were convened to facilitate implementing the chronic care model (CCM) in academic medical centers and into post-graduate medical education.

OBJECTIVE

We developed and implemented an electronic team survey (ETS) to elicit, in real-time, team member’s experiences in caring for people with chronic illness and the effect of the Collaborative on teams and teamwork.

DESIGN

The ETS is a qualitative survey based on Electronic Event Sampling Methodology. It is designed to collect meaningful information about daily experience and any event that might influence team members’ daily work and subsequent outcomes.

PARTICIPANTS

Forty-one residency programs from 37 teaching hospitals participated in the collaboratives and comprised faculty and resident physicians, nurses, and administrative staff.

APPROACH

Each team member participating in the collaboratives received an e-mail with directions to complete the ETS for four weeks during 2006 (the National Collaborative) and 2007 (the California Collaborative).

KEY RESULTS

At the team level, the response rate to the ETS was 87% with team members submitting 1,145 narrative entries. Six key themes emerged from the analysis, which were consistent across all sites. Among teams that achieved better clinical outcomes on Collaborative clinical indicators, an additional key theme emerged: professional work satisfaction, or “Joy in Work”. In contrast, among teams that performed lower in collaborative measures, two key themes emerged that reflected the effect of providing care in difficult institutional environments—“lack of professional satisfaction” and awareness of “system failures”.

CONCLUSIONS

The ETS provided a unique perspective into team performance and the day-to-day challenges and opportunities in chronic illness care. Further research is needed to explore systematic approaches to integrating the results from this study into the design of improvement efforts for clinical teams.
Keywords:
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