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Longitudinal cohort study to determine effectiveness of a novel simulated case and feedback system to improve clinical pathway adherence in breast, lung and GI cancers.

Title: Longitudinal cohort study to determine effectiveness of a novel simulated case and feedback system to improve clinical pathway adherence in breast, lung and GI cancers.
Authors: Kubal, Timothy; Letson, Doug; Chiappori, Alberto; Springett, Gregory; Shimkhada, Riti; Tamondong Lachica, Diana; Peabody, John
Source: BMJ Open, vol 6, iss 9
Publisher Information: eScholarship, University of California
Publication Year: 2016
Collection: University of California: eScholarship
Subject Terms: MEDICAL EDUCATION & TRAINING; ONCOLOGY; Adult; Breast Neoplasms; Critical Pathways; Disease Management; Feedback; Female; Florida; Gastrointestinal Neoplasms; Guideline Adherence; Humans; Linear Models; Longitudinal Studies; Lung Neoplasms; Male; Middle Aged; Severity of Illness Index
Description: OBJECTIVES: This study examined whether a measurement and feedback system led to improvements in adherence to clinical pathways. DESIGN: The M-QURE (Moffitt-Quality, Understanding, Research and Evidence) Initiative was introduced in 2012 to enhance and improve adherence to pathways at Moffitt Cancer Center (MCC) in three broad clinical areas: breast, lung and gastrointestinal (GI) cancers. M-QURE used simulated patient vignettes based on MCCs Clinical Pathways to benchmark clinician adherence and monitor change over three rounds of implementation. SETTING: MCC, located in Tampa, Florida, a National Cancer Institute Comprehensive Cancer Center. PARTICIPANTS: Three non-overlapping cohorts at MCC (one each in breast, lung and GI) totalling 48 providers participated in this study, with each member of the multidisciplinary team (composed of medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, surgeons and advanced practice providers) invited to participate. INTERVENTIONS: Each participant was asked to complete a set of simulated patient vignettes over three rounds within their own cancer specialty. Participants were required to complete all assigned vignettes over each of the three rounds, or they would be excluded from this study. PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURE: Increased domain and overall provider care adherence to clinical pathways, as scored by blinded physician abstractors. RESULTS: We found significant improvements in pathway adherence between the third and first rounds of data collection particularly for workup and treatment of cancer cases. By clinical grouping, breast improved by 13.6% (p
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: unknown
Relation: qt8zs1d247; https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8zs1d247; https://escholarship.org/content/qt8zs1d247/qt8zs1d247.pdf
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012312
Availability: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8zs1d247; https://escholarship.org/content/qt8zs1d247/qt8zs1d247.pdf; https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012312
Rights: CC-BY-NC
Accession Number: edsbas.BD0D4845
Database: BASE