Evaluating the Implementation of Patient Safety Practices to Ensure Timely, High-Quality Community Care for Veterans

NIH RePORTER · VA · I50 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Background: The expansion of Community Care (CC) through the MISSION Act, and the increasing numbers of Veterans using CC, make it critical for VHA to balance the need to improve access to care, and at the same time, ensure that the services that VHA purchases in the community are of high quality. As there is little known about the quality and safety of care that Veterans receive in the community, this timely study will begin to close these knowledge gaps. Specific Aims: Our specific aims are to: 1) Assess variation across VISNs and facilities in the implementation of Guidebook processes used for patient safety reporting investigation, and improvement; 2) Identify the organizational contextual factors that influence implementation for sites with high vs. low fidelity to Guidebook safety processes; 3) Describe variation across VISNs and sites in service outcomes: safety events, timeliness, and Veterans' perceptions of CC quality and safety; and 4) Identify specific configurations of implementation strategies and organizational contextual factors that distinguish high- vs. low-performing sites on their implementation and service outcomes. Unique Features/Innovations of Project: This timely, innovative study will evaluate a national, mandated implementation of safety processes that are described in the VHA Office of Community Care (OCC) “Patient Safety Guidebook.” The Guidebook was developed by OCC and VHA National Center for Patient Safety (NCPS) in response to gaps in safety identified in CC. Through collaboration with our operational partners (OCC and NCPS), we will provide VHA with critical information on whether use of the Guidebook as an implementation strategy is effective in improving safety of CC, and whether safety processes to report and investigate safety events in VHA are transferrable and applicable to the community setting. Methodology: For Aim 1, we will conduct semi-structured telephone interviews with approximately 3 key informants (VHA patient safety staff, local CC staff) at 18 facilities across 18 VISNs. We will ask them questions on sites' fidelity to Guidebook's safety processes, feasibility of Guidebook implementation, and which implementation strategies worked well and which did not. For Aim 2, we will obtain information from the staff interviews on their perceptions of the organizational contextual factors that influence implementation, differentiating between sites with high and low fidelity to the Guidebook's recommended processes. For Aim 3, we will examine rates and trends in VHA and CC safety events, timeliness outcomes, and perceptions of CC quality and safety by Veterans. We will integrate the results from Aims 1-3 in Aim 4 to identify specific configurations of implementation strategies and organizational contextual factors that distinguish high- vs. low-performing sites. Expected Results: This partnered evaluation will be of benefit to both Veterans and our partners by generating context-specific findings that prom...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9835216
Project number
1I50HX002800-01A1
Recipient
VA BOSTON HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
Principal Investigator
AMY K ROSEN
Activity code
I50
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
Award type
1
Project period
2019-04-01 → 2023-09-30