Melissa Z. Braganza MPH, S. I. Gidmark MPH, A. L. Taylor PhD, A. M. Kilbourne PhD, MPH
{"title":"Quality Enhancement Research Initiative Rapid Response Teams: A learning health system approach to addressing emerging health system challenges","authors":"Melissa Z. Braganza MPH, S. I. Gidmark MPH, A. L. Taylor PhD, A. M. Kilbourne PhD, MPH","doi":"10.1111/1475-6773.14380","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>As the healthcare landscape continues to evolve, research has a crucial role in helping to inform health system efforts to provide more efficient, consumer-centered care. The Learning Health System Framework provides a vision of how the research enterprise can synergize with health system operations by systematically generating and integrating research evidence with performance data and applying this knowledge to address complex policy challenges and drive sustained care improvements across the health system.<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span> Yet, research processes and timelines remain inefficient and misaligned with health system priorities and needs. Research and operations often operate under different priorities, goals, timelines, and metrics, and addressing these inherent tensions is essential to realizing Learning Health System goals and enhancing the real-world impact of research.<span><sup>3, 4</sup></span> Making research more timely and responsive to health system, provider, and consumer needs requires engaging vested partners early on to align research and health system priorities and goals and streamline research through greater utilization of pragmatic research designs, improved research infrastructures, and accelerated peer review processes.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span></p><p>The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI) was established in 1998 as a knowledge translation program under the VA Office of Research and Development to help counter tensions between research and operations. The mission of QUERI is to accelerate the uptake of evidence across the organization with the ultimate goal of improving the quality of care for US Military Veterans, their families, and their caregivers. QUERI funds more than 400 investigators and staff embedded in VA care facilities across the United States to partner with multilevel leaders, policymakers, managers, providers, and other frontline staff to implement effective practices, programs, and policies. As a bridge between operations and research, QUERI strives to support VA's transformation to a Learning Health System through identifying health system priorities using an innovative enterprise-wide process and embedding these priorities in its partnered funding opportunities, to help align QUERI implementation, evaluation, and quality improvement initiatives with VA performance goals.<span><sup>6, 7</sup></span> These operations-driven evaluations have informed the rollout of more than 80 national and regional programs/policies to help make them work at the clinic level for providers and Veterans. While these initiatives have been largely successful, they have relied on traditional research-based peer review processes that can result in a six month or longer lag time from project inception to funding. In response to operations leader requests for more rapid mechanisms for garnering evaluation support, QUERI launched the Rapid Response Team (RRT) process in October 2020. This commentary describes QUERI's RRT process, which seeks to decrease the timeline for project submission, peer review, and funder approval to less than 1 month.</p><p>QUERI's RRT process deploys implementation, evaluation, and quality improvement expertise, strategies, and tools to address national and regional developments.<span><sup>8</sup></span> Guided by the Learning Health System Framework and QUERI Implementation Roadmap, the RRT process involves identifying an emerging health system problem, designing and implementing a plan to address the problem, and disseminating the results to partners and impacted groups to enhance the uptake of an effective program/policy and foster more real-time, evidence-based clinical and policy decision-making.<span><sup>9</sup></span> RRTs provide support to help optimize a program/policy for Veterans Integrated Services Network-wide (VISN, i.e., regional health system) or national implementation.</p><p>RRTs are interdisciplinary teams consisting of investigators, healthcare providers, and support staff with experience in carrying out implementation, evaluation, and/or quality improvement methods to address operations-driven initiatives. These QUERI-funded teams have expertise in mixed methods (qualitative and quantitative expertise) and experience with VA data (e.g., VA national Electronic Health Record and administrative database management and analyses). Currently, there are 13 RRTs, embedded within QUERI Program centers. These centers, which underwent peer-review by a scientific merit review panel, are supporting the scale-up, spread, and sustainment of evidence-based and promising practices that address a VA priority (e.g., expanding Veteran access to care through virtual care).</p><p>The QUERI RRT process is a novel Learning Health System approach for aligning research expertise, methods, and tools to help address time-sensitive challenges and opportunities in a national integrated health system. The six-step RRT process begins with identifying implementation planning, evaluation, and training projects that are aligned with time-sensitive priorities and meet implementation readiness criteria. These projects are then routed to RRTs to work closely with operations partners to complete these projects and disseminate findings to enhance the uptake of the program/policy.</p><p>QUERI's novel RRT model is a practical, flexible approach for deploying implementation, evaluation, and quality improvement expertise, methods, and tools to address emerging health system priorities in a large, integrated national health system. Grounded in the Learning Health System Framework with an emphasis on partner engagement, the RRT model utilizes an accelerated review timeline to enable interdisciplinary teams to jumpstart evaluation work and support the implementation of a program/policy more quickly than typical research timelines.</p><p>The RRT process aims to make research more timely, responsive, and relevant by engaging partners throughout the course of the project—from design development to the execution of the project—and encouraging rapid, pragmatic evaluation designs.<span><sup>5, 19</sup></span> The MOU helps to overcome many of the inherent tensions between research and operations by fostering alignment around shared goals, milestones, and products.<span><sup>4</sup></span> The RRT model allows investigator teams to be nimble and provide a range of support, from creating an evaluation plan that helps an organization comply with a legislative mandate to participating in a workgroup to develop communication strategies for future emergency planning. Some RRT projects led to longer-term partnerships with operations partners providing co-funding and other resources to continue evaluation support for these initiatives.</p><p>A key strength of the QUERI RRT approach is that RRTs are embedded in QUERI Program centers, which have a broad array of clinical topic, methods, and data expertise to address a range of RRT requests. The centers encompass both long-term implementation work and operations-driven RRT projects, which helps balance investigator interests and VA operational needs. The five-year center funding cycle is crucial to ensuring the stability and bandwidth for RRTs to take on quick turnaround projects. Furthermore, the centers partner with multilevel operations leaders, and these partnerships can help establish trust and facilitate the initiation and completion of projects.</p><p>The RRT process is continuously evolving based on feedback from operations leaders and QUERI teams. Engaging partners early and often to gather input and feedback and sharing interim results in a timely manner has been essential for promoting productive, bi-directional partnerships between QUERI teams and operations leaders. In addition, defining the project scope, timeline, and deliverables and ensuring the proposed work is right sized for an RRT from the outset is key to the success of an RRT project. To support the uptake of these lessons learned from RRT projects, the MOU template has been regularly updated (e.g., inclusion of meeting cadences, timeline for sharing interim results, list of personnel and effort), and an RRT checklist was created and disseminated to guide RRTs in the development of their own internal processes. At the request of QUERI investigators, a knowledge sharing forum was launched to bring together QUERI Program center investigators and staff to share their experiences and learn from each other. For example, in the first meeting, center leads shared their processes for staffing RRT projects.</p><p>Over the last 10 years, QUERI has taken a more problem-focused approach to innovation and improvement, evolving its strategic goals, initiatives, and metrics to better align with national priorities and Learning Health System goals. The QUERI RRT process is the first step to implementing a more rapid Learning Health System in the VA, and this approach can serve as an example of how to quickly deploy research expertise to address emerging priorities and help close the gap between research and clinical practice.</p><p>The authors declare no conflict of interest.</p>","PeriodicalId":55065,"journal":{"name":"Health Services Research","volume":"59 S2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1475-6773.14380","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Health Services Research","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1475-6773.14380","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
As the healthcare landscape continues to evolve, research has a crucial role in helping to inform health system efforts to provide more efficient, consumer-centered care. The Learning Health System Framework provides a vision of how the research enterprise can synergize with health system operations by systematically generating and integrating research evidence with performance data and applying this knowledge to address complex policy challenges and drive sustained care improvements across the health system.1, 2 Yet, research processes and timelines remain inefficient and misaligned with health system priorities and needs. Research and operations often operate under different priorities, goals, timelines, and metrics, and addressing these inherent tensions is essential to realizing Learning Health System goals and enhancing the real-world impact of research.3, 4 Making research more timely and responsive to health system, provider, and consumer needs requires engaging vested partners early on to align research and health system priorities and goals and streamline research through greater utilization of pragmatic research designs, improved research infrastructures, and accelerated peer review processes.4, 5
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI) was established in 1998 as a knowledge translation program under the VA Office of Research and Development to help counter tensions between research and operations. The mission of QUERI is to accelerate the uptake of evidence across the organization with the ultimate goal of improving the quality of care for US Military Veterans, their families, and their caregivers. QUERI funds more than 400 investigators and staff embedded in VA care facilities across the United States to partner with multilevel leaders, policymakers, managers, providers, and other frontline staff to implement effective practices, programs, and policies. As a bridge between operations and research, QUERI strives to support VA's transformation to a Learning Health System through identifying health system priorities using an innovative enterprise-wide process and embedding these priorities in its partnered funding opportunities, to help align QUERI implementation, evaluation, and quality improvement initiatives with VA performance goals.6, 7 These operations-driven evaluations have informed the rollout of more than 80 national and regional programs/policies to help make them work at the clinic level for providers and Veterans. While these initiatives have been largely successful, they have relied on traditional research-based peer review processes that can result in a six month or longer lag time from project inception to funding. In response to operations leader requests for more rapid mechanisms for garnering evaluation support, QUERI launched the Rapid Response Team (RRT) process in October 2020. This commentary describes QUERI's RRT process, which seeks to decrease the timeline for project submission, peer review, and funder approval to less than 1 month.
QUERI's RRT process deploys implementation, evaluation, and quality improvement expertise, strategies, and tools to address national and regional developments.8 Guided by the Learning Health System Framework and QUERI Implementation Roadmap, the RRT process involves identifying an emerging health system problem, designing and implementing a plan to address the problem, and disseminating the results to partners and impacted groups to enhance the uptake of an effective program/policy and foster more real-time, evidence-based clinical and policy decision-making.9 RRTs provide support to help optimize a program/policy for Veterans Integrated Services Network-wide (VISN, i.e., regional health system) or national implementation.
RRTs are interdisciplinary teams consisting of investigators, healthcare providers, and support staff with experience in carrying out implementation, evaluation, and/or quality improvement methods to address operations-driven initiatives. These QUERI-funded teams have expertise in mixed methods (qualitative and quantitative expertise) and experience with VA data (e.g., VA national Electronic Health Record and administrative database management and analyses). Currently, there are 13 RRTs, embedded within QUERI Program centers. These centers, which underwent peer-review by a scientific merit review panel, are supporting the scale-up, spread, and sustainment of evidence-based and promising practices that address a VA priority (e.g., expanding Veteran access to care through virtual care).
The QUERI RRT process is a novel Learning Health System approach for aligning research expertise, methods, and tools to help address time-sensitive challenges and opportunities in a national integrated health system. The six-step RRT process begins with identifying implementation planning, evaluation, and training projects that are aligned with time-sensitive priorities and meet implementation readiness criteria. These projects are then routed to RRTs to work closely with operations partners to complete these projects and disseminate findings to enhance the uptake of the program/policy.
QUERI's novel RRT model is a practical, flexible approach for deploying implementation, evaluation, and quality improvement expertise, methods, and tools to address emerging health system priorities in a large, integrated national health system. Grounded in the Learning Health System Framework with an emphasis on partner engagement, the RRT model utilizes an accelerated review timeline to enable interdisciplinary teams to jumpstart evaluation work and support the implementation of a program/policy more quickly than typical research timelines.
The RRT process aims to make research more timely, responsive, and relevant by engaging partners throughout the course of the project—from design development to the execution of the project—and encouraging rapid, pragmatic evaluation designs.5, 19 The MOU helps to overcome many of the inherent tensions between research and operations by fostering alignment around shared goals, milestones, and products.4 The RRT model allows investigator teams to be nimble and provide a range of support, from creating an evaluation plan that helps an organization comply with a legislative mandate to participating in a workgroup to develop communication strategies for future emergency planning. Some RRT projects led to longer-term partnerships with operations partners providing co-funding and other resources to continue evaluation support for these initiatives.
A key strength of the QUERI RRT approach is that RRTs are embedded in QUERI Program centers, which have a broad array of clinical topic, methods, and data expertise to address a range of RRT requests. The centers encompass both long-term implementation work and operations-driven RRT projects, which helps balance investigator interests and VA operational needs. The five-year center funding cycle is crucial to ensuring the stability and bandwidth for RRTs to take on quick turnaround projects. Furthermore, the centers partner with multilevel operations leaders, and these partnerships can help establish trust and facilitate the initiation and completion of projects.
The RRT process is continuously evolving based on feedback from operations leaders and QUERI teams. Engaging partners early and often to gather input and feedback and sharing interim results in a timely manner has been essential for promoting productive, bi-directional partnerships between QUERI teams and operations leaders. In addition, defining the project scope, timeline, and deliverables and ensuring the proposed work is right sized for an RRT from the outset is key to the success of an RRT project. To support the uptake of these lessons learned from RRT projects, the MOU template has been regularly updated (e.g., inclusion of meeting cadences, timeline for sharing interim results, list of personnel and effort), and an RRT checklist was created and disseminated to guide RRTs in the development of their own internal processes. At the request of QUERI investigators, a knowledge sharing forum was launched to bring together QUERI Program center investigators and staff to share their experiences and learn from each other. For example, in the first meeting, center leads shared their processes for staffing RRT projects.
Over the last 10 years, QUERI has taken a more problem-focused approach to innovation and improvement, evolving its strategic goals, initiatives, and metrics to better align with national priorities and Learning Health System goals. The QUERI RRT process is the first step to implementing a more rapid Learning Health System in the VA, and this approach can serve as an example of how to quickly deploy research expertise to address emerging priorities and help close the gap between research and clinical practice.
期刊介绍:
Health Services Research (HSR) is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal that provides researchers and public and private policymakers with the latest research findings, methods, and concepts related to the financing, organization, delivery, evaluation, and outcomes of health services. Rated as one of the top journals in the fields of health policy and services and health care administration, HSR publishes outstanding articles reporting the findings of original investigations that expand knowledge and understanding of the wide-ranging field of health care and that will help to improve the health of individuals and communities.