Taking Best Practices to Scale: Spreading Effective Healthcare Practices & Programs (Text Version)
On September 29, 2010, Wynne E. Norton made this presentation at the 2010 Annual Conference. Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (290 KB).
Slide 1
Taking Best Practices to Scale: Spreading Effective Healthcare Practices & Programs
C. Joseph McCannon, IHI
Brian S. Mittman, VA
Wynne E. Norton, UAB
Denise Dougherty, AHRQ
Michael Harrison, AHRQ
September 29th, 2010
AHRQ Annual Research Meeting
AHRQ #R13HS019422
Slide 2
Objectives
Achieving large-scale implementation requires a new set of research, policy, and practice efforts to understand and address these challenges and facilitate scale-up and spread. This session will (1) describe a series of activities, including a state-of-the-art conference held in July, that the presenters launched to stimulate greater interest and activity in scale-up and spread and (2) engage session attendees in generating ideas for additional activities needed to accelerate scale-up and spread of effective health programs throughout the United States and abroad.
Slide 3
Overview
- Introduction & Initial Activities
- Overview of Conference
- Example of Working Group
- Deliverables & Post-conference Activities
- Comments from AHRQ
- Structured Discussion
Slide 4
Introduction & Initial Activities
Slide 5
Definition of Scale-up/Spread
"Deliberate efforts to increase the impact of health service innovations successfully tested in pilot or experimental projects so as to benefit more people and to foster policy and program development on a lasting basis."
—Simmons, Fajans, Ghiron, 2007
Slide 6
Why Scale-up/Spread Now?
Portfolio of Effective Health Innovations
- Demonstrated efficacy and/or effectiveness.
- Variety of settings, populations, and behaviors.
- Guidelines, initiatives, simple and complex behavioral interventions, etc.
- Examples:
- AHRQ Health Care Innovations Exchange
- National Registry of Evidence-based Programs & Practices
- Cancer Control P.L.A.N.E.T.
- National Guideline Clearinghouse
Slide 7
Why Scale-up/Spread Now?
Effective D/I Strategies
- Increasing emphasis on D/I research.
- Increasing identification of effective or promising D/I strategies.
- Examples:
- Technical Assistance (Hamdallah et al., 2006).
- Organizational change models (Glisson & Schoenwald, 2005).
- Models, theories, and frameworks (Glasgow et al., 1999; Wandersman et al., 2008).
- Reviews (Bero et al., 1998; Grimshaw et al., 2006; Grol & Grimshaw, 2003).
Slide 8
Why Scale-up/Spread Now?
Need to Plan Ahead
- Scale-up rarely happens automatically.
- Scaling-up requires significant preparation and planning:
- Human and financial resources.
- Political and policy support.
- Community, organization, and agency collaboration and buy-in.
- State, regional, and/or national coordination.
- Issues faced during small-scale studies or pilots are different—and typically less complex—than those faced in large-scale trials or initiatives.
Slide 9
Increasing Focus on Scale-up/Spread
- Research:
- Cluster RCTs and PCTs.
- Embedded research, mixed methods.
- Frameworks, lessons learned, reviews.
- Case Studies:
- Scaling up health service delivery: from pilot innovations to policies and programs (Simmons, Fajans, & Ghiron, 2007).
- Best Practices in Scaling-up (JSI, 2006).
- Case Studies in Global Health: Millions Saved (Levine, 2007).
- Meetings & Organizations:
- ExpandNet/WHO.
- USAID: Research and Evaluation Methods for Scaling-up Evidence-based Interventions.
Slide 10
Initial Scale-up/Spread Activities
- Think tank, NIH D&I Conference, January 2009
- Presentations from NIH, Kaiser Permanente, AHRQ, RWJF, VA, CDC, and UCONN and discussion with session attendees.
- Working dinner meeting, January 2009
- 30 stakeholder representatives from AHRQ, Commonwealth Fund, CMS, HRSA, IHI, NIH, Harvard, RWJF, John A. Hartford Foundation, Kaiser Permanente, SAMHSA, VA, and the Universities of Michigan, Connecticut, Washington (St. Louis and Seattle).
- What action is needed by key stakeholder groups to facilitate scale-up/spread?
- Preliminary recommendations for promoting scale-up/spread.
Slide 11
Initial Scale-up/Spread Activities
- Health Funders Bending the Curve: Accelerating the Journey from Evidence to Adoption, Donaghue Foundation & RWJF, June 2009.
- Discuss opportunities and challenges with adoption of research findings so funds can have greatest impact.
- Attendees included AHRQ, CA HealthCare Foundation, Commonwealth Fund, Grantmakers in Health, VA, Kellogg Foundation, John A. Hartford Foundation.
- Commissioned Study, 2009-2010
- Funded by Donaghue Foundation.
- Semi-structured interviews with 10 exemplary programs.
- Barriers, facilitators, and initial recommendations for scaling-up health promotion/disease prevention interventions.
Slide 12
Next Steps
- Need for larger, more comprehensive meeting on scale-up/spread.
- Include researchers, practitioners and policymakers.
- Public health and health care.
- State-of-the-Art conference...
Slide 13
Scale-up/Spread Conference
Slide 14
A Conference to Advance the Science & Practice of Scale-up/Spread of Effective Health Programs
- July 6-8th, 2010 in Washington, D.C.
- Organizers: Joe McCannon (IHI), Brian Mittman (VA), and Wynne Norton (UAB).
- Funders: AHRQ, Commonwealth Fund, VA, Donaghue Foundation, and John A. Hartford Foundation.
- Planning Committee Members: IHI, NIMH, VA, CMS, Karolinska, Gates Foundation, AHRQ, Commonwealth Fund, URC, and Univ. Wisconsin.
Slide 15
Attendees
- IHI
- UAB
- VA
- RWJF
- AHRQ
- CMS
- Gates Foundation
- Kaiser Permanente
- CDC
- U.S. Dept of Education
- NIMH
- CIHR
- Stanford
- USCF
- UNC
- Johns Hopkins
- Harvard
- Yale
- Georgetown
- USAID/URC
- AHA (HRET)
- Karolinska Institute
- ExpandNet
- Blue Cross Blue Shield
- John A. Harford Foundation
- Health Partners
- Donaghue Foundation
Slide 16
Conference Aims
- To review existing knowledge and current practices related to the scale-up and spread of effective practice in health care and public health.
- To identify key challenges and gaps in current research, policy, and practice related to scale-up and spread in health care and public health.
- To develop and disseminate a detailed agenda outlining critical research, policy, and practice initiatives on these topics for the next five to seven years.
- To launch specific activities to operationalize this agenda, creating a plan of action to prioritize research, policy, and practice activity and initiating powerful demonstrations of regional, national, and international scale-up in health care and public health.
Slide 17
Conference Format
- Modeled after VA State-of-the-Art meetings.
- Brief introduction and background.
- Small working groups, product-oriented.
- Evening session speakers:
- Huggy Rao (Stanford)
- Nancy Dixon (GW)
- Rashad Massoud (URC)
- Russ Glasgow (Kaiser)
- Chris Goeschel (Johns Hopkins)
- Anne-Marie Audet (Commonwealth)
Slide 18
Conference Content
- General meeting overview, logistics, worksheets.
- Background papers and case studies.
- Working bibliography.
- Database of research and practice activities.
- Commissioned papers:
- Health care (Perla et al., IHI)
- Public health (Edwards, CIHR)
- International (Øvretveit , Karolinska)
- General framework (McCannon, IHI)
Slide 19
Working Groups
Working Group Charge:
- Envision the ideal system for scale-up and spread
- Identify gaps between current state and future state
- Make detailed recommendations for action
Working Group Chairs:
- Health Care Research: Denise Dougherty, AHRQ
- Policy: Maulik Joshi, HRET/AHA
- Public Health Research: Todd Molfenter, Univ. Wisconsin
- Health Care Practice: Marie Schall, IHI
- Public Health Practice: Jürgen Unützer, Univ. Washington
Slide 20
Recommendations
- Create more thoughtful incentives for scale-up/spread (e.g., funding, recognition, career advancement).
- Stimulate donor-researcher-funder coordination in order to coordinate goals, priorities and activities.
- Enhance "pull" systems of change to complement "push" efforts.
- Develop environments for learning and sharing on scale-up:
- Knowledge exchanges, webinars, curricula.
Slide 21
Recommendations
- Develop tools and resources on executing scale-up and spread:
- How-to guides (what, when, and how to spread for different types of interventions).
- Case studies.
- Taxonomies.
- Technologies.
- Develop and catalogue expanded research methods and improved data collection systems.
Slide 22
Example of Conference Working Group
Health Care Research Working Group
Chair: Denise Dougherty, AHRQ
Slide 23
Deliverables & Post-Conference Activities
Slide 24
Short-Term Deliverables
- VA-sponsored scale-up/spread webinar series.
- Peer-reviewed publications.
- Detailed agenda for research and practice, including "performance challenges" (meeting proceedings).
- Update and expand scale-up/spread databases and resource listings (e.g., tools, literature, projects/programs).
- Presentations at targeted meetings.
- Interactive Scale-up/Spread Listserv.
Slide 25
Potential Longer-Term Actions
- Active contribution to major scale-up projects.
- Advocacy: Active connection to donors, policymakers, etc.
- Durable learning network: Case studies, information exchanges, community of practice.
- Annual gathering.
- Course development.
- Tool development.
Slide 26
Comments from AHRQ Attendees
Michael Harrison, PhD
Denise Dougherty, PhD
Slide 27
Thank you!
Scale-up/Spread Blog:
www.ihiscaleupconference10.blogspot.com


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