PROJECT SUMMARY Heart failure (HF) is a costly and complex health condition affecting millions of Americans. HF care is often fragmented which negatively affects quality, safety, and patient-centered outcomes. Structured Interprofessional Bedside Rounds (SIBR) is a model of care developed to bring interprofessional team members together with patients and families using a structured format to collaboratively arrive at a daily care plan. The SIBR model is characterized by four core components: an interprofessional approach, utilization of a rounding structure, intentional patient and family engagement, and development of a shared daily care plan. A growing body of evidence associates SIBR implementation with improvements in team and patient outcomes. The hypothesized mechanism through which SIBR operates is that having a predictable structure leads to improvements in communication, fewer gaps in care, and more consistent utilization of evidence-based approaches. These changes are thought to lead to improvements in patient outcomes such as, length of stay, readmission rates, patient-centeredness of care, and safety/adverse events. Despite frequent improvements in outcomes following SIBR implementation, an evidence gap exists as to the role that fidelity (adherence) to the SIBR model plays in how and why this model works and the extent to which outcomes can be further improved if fidelity is higher. To address this knowledge gap, this proposal leverages a timely opportunity to study SIBR fidelity and its relationship to care and outcomes among patients with advanced HF at the University of Washington Medical Center, where a SIBR model has been the standard of care for 4+ years. The central hypothesis is that higher- fidelity SIBR will be associated with better outcomes. To test this hypothesis, I will carry out a prospective cohort study to achieve three specific aims: (1) identify associations between SIBR fidelity and patient outcomes, (2) determine the extent to which SIBR fidelity predicts time to initiation and completion of an evidence-based “Advanced HF Work-Up Pathway”, and (3) examine patient and family experiences of care quality and safety in the context of higher- and lower- fidelity SIBR. These aims will lay the groundwork for an initial multi-site R01 to study SIBR in practice and a future R-level grant to implement and evaluate an optimized SIBR model. Through this work, I will obtain formal training in HF outcomes research, advanced implementation science study designs, and patient-oriented clinical research methods. I will be mentored by an expert team of NHLBI-funded researchers, Bryan Weiner (primary mentor, implementation science), Randall Curtis (communication and palliative care), Brenda Zierler (interprofessional collaboration and clinical pathways), and Kevin O'Brien (advanced heart failure care). The combination of mentorship, coursework, and experiential learning will position me to become an independent investigator using s...