卫生保健组织之间的合作学习,以提高质量和促进种族公平。

IF 2.6 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Health Equity Pub Date : 2023-09-13 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1089/heq.2023.0098
Ivan A Copado, Amanda L Brewster, Sarah D Epstein, Timothy T Brown, Hector P Rodriguez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:该研究考察了利益相关者在马萨诸塞州蓝十字蓝盾组织(BCBSMA)赞助和领导、医疗保健改善研究所(IHI)协助下开展的全州学习合作的经验,以减少护理质量方面的种族和民族差异。方法:对关键利益相关者(n=44)的访谈进行分析,以评估合作学习和干预措施的经验,以减少护理质量方面的种族和民族差异。访谈对象包括BCBSMA、IHI、供应商团体和外部专家。结果:乳腺癌症筛查、癌症筛查、高血压管理和糖尿病管理是缩小差异的重点领域。协作学习方法包括专家指导、小组会议和最佳实践分享。测试的干预措施包括药剂师主导的药物管理、改进种族、族裔和语言(REaL)数据收集的策略、交通便利性的改善以及社区卫生工作者的方法。利益相关者的经验突出了三个主题:(1)学习协作使提供者团体能够测试干预措施,(2)基础设施和试点资金是基础性投资,但团体需要比最初预期更多的资源,以及(3)质量改进和健康公平方面的专业知识对于测试干预措施和预计未来需要这种专业知识的群体至关重要。结论:BCBSMA的学习合作和干预资金支持签约提供商加强REaL数据收集,小规模实施以公平为重点的干预措施,并评估其可行性和影响。合作促进了各群体就减少种族质量差异的创新方法进行的学习。对可持续性的关切突显了专业知识对实施减少种族和族裔差异举措的重要性。
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Collaborative Learning Among Health Care Organizations to Improve Quality and Advance Racial Equity.

Background: The study examined stakeholder experiences of a statewide learning collaborative, sponsored and led by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts (BCBSMA) and facilitated by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in quality of care.

Methods: Interviews of key stakeholders (n=44) were analyzed to assess experiences of collaborative learning and interventions to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in quality of care. The interviews included BCBSMA, IHI, provider groups, and external experts.

Results: Breast cancer screening, colorectal cancer screening, hypertension management, and diabetes management were focal areas for reducing disparities. Collaborative learning methods involved expert coaching, group meetings, and sharing of best practices. Interventions tested included pharmacist-led medication management, strategies to improve the collection of race, ethnicity, and language (REaL) data, transportation access improvement, and community health worker approaches. Stakeholder experiences highlighted three themes: (1) the learning collaborative enabled the testing of interventions by provider groups, (2) infrastructure and pilot funding were foundational investments, but groups needed more resources than they initially anticipated, and (3) expertise in quality improvement and health equity were critical for the testing of interventions and groups anticipated needing this expertise into the future.

Conclusions: BCBSMA's learning collaborative and intervention funding supported contracted providers in enhancing REaL data collection, implementing equity-focused interventions on a small scale, and evaluating their feasibility and impact. The collaborative facilitated learning among groups on innovative approaches for reducing racial disparities in quality. Concerns about sustainability underscore the importance of expertise for implementing initiatives to reduce racial and ethnic disparities.

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来源期刊
Health Equity
Health Equity Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
3.70%
发文量
97
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊最新文献
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