Practice Facilitator Strategies for Addressing Electronic Health Record Data Challenges for Quality Improvement: EvidenceNOW

Purpose: Practice facilitators (“facilitators”) can play an important role in supporting primary care practices in performing quality improvement (QI), but they need complete and accurate clinical performance data from practices' electronic health records (EHR) to help them set improvement priorities, guide clinical change, and monitor progress. Here, we describe the strategies facilitators use to help practices perform QI when complete or accurate performance data are not available. Methods: Seven regional cooperatives enrolled approximately 1500 small-to-medium-sized primary care practices and 136 facilitators in EvidenceNOW, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's initiative to improve cardiovascular preventive services. The national evaluation team analyzed qualitative data from online diaries, site visit field notes, and interviews to discover how facilitators worked with practices on EHR data challenges to obtain and use data for QI. Results: We found facilitators faced practice-level EHR data challenges, such as a lack of clinical performance data, partial or incomplete clinical performance data, and inaccurate clinical performance data. We found that facilitators responded to these challenges, respectively, by using other data sources or tools to fill in for missing data, approximating performance reports and generating patient lists, and teaching practices how to document care and confirm performance measures. In addition, facilitators helped practices communicate with EHR vendors or health systems in requesting data they needed. Overall, facilitators tailored strategies to fit the individual practice and helped build data skills and trust. Conclusion: Facilitators can use a range of strategies to help practices perform data-driven QI when performance data are inaccurate, incomplete, or missing. Support is necessary to help practices, particularly those with EHR data challenges, build their capacity for conducting data-driven QI that is required of them for participating in practice transformation and performance-based payment programs. It is questionable how practices with data challenges will perform in programs without this kind of support.

[1]  L. Casalino,et al.  Increased Health Information Technology Adoption and Use Among Small Primary Care Physician Practices Over Time: A National Cohort Study , 2017, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[2]  Dawn Heisey-Grove,et al.  Using Electronic Clinical Quality Measure Reporting for Public Health Surveillance , 2015, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[3]  Robert L Phillips,et al.  The Primary Care Extension Program: A Catalyst for Change , 2013, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[4]  Peter J Pronovost,et al.  The GAAP in quality measurement and reporting. , 2007, JAMA.

[5]  N. Baskerville,et al.  Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Practice Facilitation Within Primary Care Settings , 2012, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[6]  M. Furukawa,et al.  EHR adopters vs. non-adopters: Impacts of, barriers to, and federal initiatives for EHR adoption. , 2014, Healthcare.

[7]  M. Parchman,et al.  Developing and Running a Primary Care Practice Facilitation Program A HowTo Guide , 2011 .

[8]  A D Oxman,et al.  Audit and feedback: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes. , 2003, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[9]  Carlos Roberto Jaén,et al.  Summary of the National Demonstration Project and Recommendations for the Patient-Centered Medical Home , 2010, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[10]  Gillian Harvey,et al.  Enabling Continuous Quality Improvement in Practice: The Role and Contribution of Facilitation , 2017, Front. Public Health.

[11]  Douglas H. Fernald,et al.  Supporting Primary Care Practices in Building Capacity to Use Health Information Data , 2014, EGEMS.

[12]  Physician Feedback Reports : Designing for Optimal Impact on Performance , 2016 .

[13]  L. Casalino,et al.  Small physician practices in new york needed sustained help to realize gains in quality from use of electronic health records. , 2013, Health affairs.

[14]  Chenghui Li Use of health information technology by office-based physicians: comparison of two contemporaneous public-use physician surveys. , 2011, Perspectives in health information management.

[15]  A D Oxman,et al.  Audit and feedback: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes. , 2006, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[16]  J. Westfall,et al.  The Colorado Asthma Toolkit Program: A Practice Coaching Intervention from the High Plains Research Network , 2011, The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.

[17]  Jeremy M. Grimshaw,et al.  Growing Literature, Stagnant Science? Systematic Review, Meta-Regression and Cumulative Analysis of Audit and Feedback Interventions in Health Care , 2014, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[18]  C. Liddy,et al.  Primary care quality improvement from a practice facilitator’s perspective , 2014, BMC Family Practice.

[19]  Thomas Bodenheimer,et al.  Facilitating improvement in primary care: the promise of practice coaching. , 2012, Issue brief.

[21]  C. Fox,et al.  Health Information Technology Needs Help from Primary Care Researchers , 2015, The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.

[22]  Jane M. Young,et al.  Audit and feedback: effects on professional practice and healthcare outcomes. , 2012, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[23]  R. Palmer,et al.  Effect of Facilitation on Practice Outcomes in the National Demonstration Project Model of the Patient-Centered Medical Home , 2010, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[24]  L. Green,et al.  Sustaining “Meaningful Use” of Health Information Technology in Low-Resource Practices , 2015, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[25]  Farzad Mostashari,et al.  A National Study of Challenges to Electronic Health Record Adoption and Meaningful Use , 2014, Medical care.

[26]  Katrina E. Donahue,et al.  Natural History of Practice Transformation: Development and Initial Testing of an Outcomes-Based Model , 2013, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[27]  N. Baskerville,et al.  Cost savings associated with improving appropriate and reducing inappropriate preventive care: cost-consequences analysis , 2005, BMC health services research.

[28]  B. Yawn,et al.  Implementing Asthma Guidelines Using Practice Facilitation and Local Learning Collaboratives: A Randomized Controlled Trial , 2014, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[29]  J. Dale,et al.  A national facilitation project to improve primary palliative care: impact of the Gold Standards Framework on process and self-ratings of quality , 2009, Quality & Safety in Health Care.

[30]  Farzad Mostashari,et al.  The Health IT Regional Extension Center Program: evolution and lessons for health care transformation. , 2014, Health services research.

[31]  Robert L Phillips,et al.  Factors Influencing Family Physician Adoption of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) , 2013, The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.

[32]  The Utah Beacon Experience: Integrating Quality Improvement, Health Information Technology, and Practice Facilitation to Improve Diabetes Outcomes in Small Health Care Facilities , 2014, EGEMS.

[33]  M. Parchman,et al.  Developing and Running a Primary Care Practice Facilitation Program: A How-To Guide. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality , 2011 .

[34]  Vaishali Patel,et al.  National findings regarding health IT use and participation in health care delivery reform programs among office-based physicians , 2017, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[35]  M. Lorentzon Doing Qualitative Research , 1993 .

[36]  D. Peikes,et al.  Enhancing the Primary Care Team to Provide Redesigned Care: The Roles of Practice Facilitators and Care Managers , 2013, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[37]  B. Crabtree,et al.  Practice Facilitation to Improve Diabetes Care in Primary Care: A Report From the EPIC Randomized Clinical Trial , 2014, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[38]  W L Miller,et al.  Qualitative analysis: how to begin making sense. , 1994, Family practice research journal.

[39]  Regional extension coordinators: use of practice support and electronic health records to improve quality and efficiency. , 2011, North Carolina medical journal.

[40]  D. Peikes,et al.  Building Quality Improvement Capacity in Primary Care: Supports and Resources , 2013 .

[41]  Kurt C Stange,et al.  Primary Care Practice Transformation is Hard Work: Insights From a 15-year Developmental Program of Research , 2011, Medical care.

[42]  K. Stange,et al.  Practice-Tailored Facilitation to Improve Pediatric Preventive Care Delivery: A Randomized Trial , 2014, Pediatrics.

[43]  S. S A A G G E E P P U U B B L L I I C C A A T T I I,et al.  SAGE PUBLICATIONS , 2005 .

[44]  David A Dorr,et al.  Primary Care Practices' Abilities And Challenges In Using Electronic Health Record Data For Quality Improvement. , 2018, Health affairs.

[45]  Susan Michie,et al.  No more ‘business as usual’ with audit and feedback interventions: towards an agenda for a reinvigorated intervention , 2014, Implementation Science.