Level – All

Cognitive Task Analysis: Methods to Improve Patient-Centered Medical Home Models by Understanding and Leveraging its Knowledge Work

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Source: PCMH (Patient Centered Medical Home)

Type: Article

Level: Intermediate

Description: ”Cognitive task analysis (CTA) is a family of methods designed to reveal the thinking involved in performing tasks in real-world contexts. CTA can be used to uncover and describe key patterns, variations, opportunities for improvement, and leverage the “knowledge work”—not just the physical work—of primary care staff and clinicians implementing PCMH models.”



Anthropological Approaches: Uncovering Unexpected Insights About the Implementation and Outcomes of Patient-Centered Medical Home Models

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Source: PCMH (Patient Centered Medical Home)

 

Type: Article

 

Level: Intermediate

 

Description: “Anthropology explores human culture, behavior, and expression using an ethnographic approach, which employs multiple methods of data collection to construct a holistic and contextual view of the phenomena under study. It excels in uncovering unexpected insights by studying a topic in person, in situ, over time, and from diverse perspectives.” www.pcmh.ahrq.gov



Expanding the Toolbox: Methods to Study and Refine Patient-Centered Medical Home Models

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Source: PCMH (Patient Centered Medical Home)

Type: Article

Level: Basic

Description: “This overview provides an introduction to the PCMH Research Methods Series and introduces methods or approaches that have the potential to expand and refine understanding of the PCMH as a complex health care intervention and innovation.” www.pcmh.ahrq.gov



Advanced Topics in Implementation Science Research

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Source: NCI (National Cancer Institute)

Type: Audio/video capture (60 min in duration)

Level: Advanced

Description:   The topic of this webinar is “How engaged are we? Measuring community engagement and partnership”. This webinar provides detailed models and strategies to implement and monitor community engagement and Community-based Participatory Research (CBPR).

 



Health IT Success Story: Using IT to Fight Care Fragmentation (Improving Care Transitions for Patients with Complex Health Needs through Decision Support)

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Source: AHRQ (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality)

Type: Audio/video capture (6 min in duration)

Level: Basic

Description: This video describes a example of integrating Health IT systems into practice. The described project’s goal was to use Health IT to facilitate information movement and combat care fragmentation.  The project monitored 6,000 patients with complex health needs, and, when care was delivered, a multi-prong approach notified all parties involved.

 

 



Community Engagement: A Real-World Example

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Source: Clinical Directors Network, Inc.

Type: audio and video segment (mp4; 2 min in duration)

Level: Basic

Description: This session aims to capture a real-world example of a collaborative, community-engaged research partnership. We hope that viewers are able to use these examples as a model in developing their own Community-Based Participatory Research (CPBR) projects.

The featured CBPR Project is entitled “Establishing a Community-Associated Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) Surveillance Network”, funded by: The Rockefeller University Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCTS); Pilot Grant and Administrative Supplement (NIH-NCATS Grant # 8-UL1-TR000043). This project is a collaboration between the Rockefeller University, multiple Community Health Centers (Urban health Plan, Manhattan Physicians Group 125th Street, Open Door Family Health Center, Hudson River Health Care, Brookdale Family Care Center, and Manhattan Physicians Group 95th Street), and multiple Practice Based Research Networks (Alliance of Chicago, Clinical Directors Network, Inc. of New York City and STAR-NET, San Antonio Texas). All members are engaged and participate onsite or virtually.

This is a real-world example of a community-engaged research project: entitled “Engagement and Outreach to Barbershops and Beauty Salons for Education Outreach about Community-Associated Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA)”. Clinician Rhonda Burgess, RN, BSN from CHC Manhattan Physicians Group explains development and implementation of the project.



Dissemination and Reporting of Research Findings: A Community Health Center Engaged Process

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Source: Clinical Directors Network, Inc.

Type: Audio/Video Capture (mp4; 13 minutes in duration)

Level: Intermediate

Description: This session aims to capture a real-world example of a collaborative, community-engaged research partnership. We hope that viewers are able to use these examples as a model in developing their own Community-Based Participatory Research (CPBR) projects.

The featured CBPR Project is entitled “Establishing a Community-Associated Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) Surveillance Network”, funded by: The Rockefeller University Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCTS); Pilot Grant and Administrative Supplement (NIH-NCATS Grant # 8-UL1-TR000043). This project is a collaboration between the Rockefeller University, multiple Community Health Centers (Urban health Plan, Manhattan Physicians Group 125th Street, Open Door Family Health Center, Hudson River Health Care, Brookdale Family Care Center, and Manhattan Physicians Group 95th Street), and multiple Practice Based Research Networks (Alliance of Chicago, Clinical Directors Network, Inc. of New York City and STAR-NET, San Antonio Texas). All members are engaged and participate onsite or virtually.

This session provides an example of the collaborative discussion of dissemination strategies needed to disseminate findings of this CBPR project. Dissemination strategies focus on reaching professionals as well as community members. Strategies are discussed, including abstracts and papers and presentations at academic meetings. The CHC team-members are actively involved in this process: they discuss abstracts they have presented and will present at national and local conferences related to the project and brainstorm future dissemination opportunities including live and virtual webcast presentations.

 

 

 



Lessons Learned Obtaining Informed Consent in Research with Vulnerable Populations in Community Health Center Settings

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Source:  Riden HE, Grooms KN, Clark CR, Cohen LR, Gagne J, Tovar DA, Ommerborn MJ, Orton PS, Johnson PA. BMC Research Notes.  2012 Nov 7; 5:624.

Type: Open Access Research Article

Level: Intermediate

Description: This research articles discusses  the informed consent process and recruitment barriers in the context of a medical record review study.

 



Quick Health Data Online

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Source: The Office On Women’s Health at the US Department of Health and Human Services

Type: Online database

Level: Basic

Description: This database provides information and statistics on many health topics. Users can search for data by selecting from the following categories: access, codes and status, demographics, disease, maternal health, mental health, mortality, prevention, reproductive health, violence, and HP 2020; and selecting geographical areas to generate a report.



NIAID New Investigator and Early-Stage Investigator Portal

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Source: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease at National Institute of Health

Type: Online portal

Level: Basic

Description: This is a  menu that links  new investigators with NIH resources on grant writing and funding.