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Improving Care Coordination For The Homeless Population Using Systematic Quality Improvement, Rutendo Nyasvisvo Apr 2021

Improving Care Coordination For The Homeless Population Using Systematic Quality Improvement, Rutendo Nyasvisvo

Doctoral Projects

Background and Objectives: Care coordination for the homeless population is challenging due to the complexity of healthcare and the uncertain life circumstances of the homeless individual. Objectives were developed to guide care coordination for the homeless by utilization of the free clinic to create PCP referrals, appointments and tracking follow-up care to increase appointment attendance and improve health outcomes for the homeless individual.

Design: A quality improvement project.

Setting: A faith-based non-profit homeless shelter organization in the Midwestern United States.

Participants: Participants include 25 homeless guests, 5 staff members including a clinic coordinator, 3 registered nurses and 1 licensed practical …


A Program Evaluation To Assess Readiness For The National Committee For Quality Assurance’S Patient Centered Medical Home Model Application, Alida M. Semrinec Apr 2021

A Program Evaluation To Assess Readiness For The National Committee For Quality Assurance’S Patient Centered Medical Home Model Application, Alida M. Semrinec

Doctoral Projects

The Patient Centered Medical Home Model is associated with enhanced patient experience and quality improvement outcomes. The Model has the capacity to guide primary care practices to enhance quality, provide more comprehensive, patient centered care, and increase practice revenue. An urban, nurse managed community health center that has recently implemented the nurse care manager role (a Model requirement) desires to apply for recognition. A program evaluation was conducted to assess current practice, policies, and procedures in place at a Community Health Center through the lens of the National Committee for Quality Assurance’s forty Patient Centered Medical Home Model core competencies. …


Evaluation Of The Integration Of Behavioral Health Services Into Primary Care, David B. Vander Ark Apr 2020

Evaluation Of The Integration Of Behavioral Health Services Into Primary Care, David B. Vander Ark

Doctoral Projects

Background: Primary care providers are increasingly challenged with managing individuals with behavioral health needs. Evidence suggests that integrating behavioral health services into primary care can improve individual health outcomes and can improve access to behavioral health services.

Objectives: The purpose of this project is to evaluate key outcomes following the evidencebased integration of behavioral health services into a primary care practice.

Methods: Using the Collaborative Practice Model as the implementation model, the behavioral health leadership team added a licensed social worker to a primary care practice on a pilot basis. The social worker offers short-term solution-focused therapy, focusing on depression …


Improving Blood Pressure Control Among Patients Diagnosed With Hypertension In A Primary Care Setting, Eriko Apriliando Apr 2020

Improving Blood Pressure Control Among Patients Diagnosed With Hypertension In A Primary Care Setting, Eriko Apriliando

Doctoral Projects

Hypertension affects over 38% of adults or approximately 103 million Americans, costing around $131 billion annually in treatment and loss of productivity. It is also an independent risk factor for coronary events, heart failure, stroke, and end-stage renal disease contributing to 410,624 United States (U.S.) deaths in 2014. The American Heart Association (2016) has released the Measure Accurately, Act Rapidly, and Partner with Patient (MAP) protocol in order to address this issue. This project focused on implementing parts of the MAP protocol. The purpose was to improve blood pressure (BP) control of patients diagnosed with hypertension in a primary care …


Process Improvement To Improve Quality Measures In A Rural Primary Care Clinic, Lucille Yurko Vanderwoude Apr 2020

Process Improvement To Improve Quality Measures In A Rural Primary Care Clinic, Lucille Yurko Vanderwoude

Doctoral Projects

Health disparities are differences in health that increase the amount of sickness in certain parts of the population, these inequalities in health are directly influenced by social, economic and environmental status (Healthy People 2020, 2008). Individuals living in poverty, violence, or disability have less opportunity for good healthcare and often have higher rates of chronic disease. Rural geographic locations additionally fall under this category (Healthy People 2020, 2008). These disparities can result from decreased exercise, violence in living situations, and unhealthy diet choices or options (CDC, 2018). Research has shown that health disparities increase with a reduction of individual’s income …


The Effect Of The Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral To Treatment (Sbirt) Model On Adult Depression In An Outpatient Setting, Genevieve E. Sweeney Apr 2020

The Effect Of The Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral To Treatment (Sbirt) Model On Adult Depression In An Outpatient Setting, Genevieve E. Sweeney

Doctoral Projects

Depression is one of the most common chronic conditions in the world. Despite this, depression continues to be under-screened, inaccurately assessed and diagnosed, and poorly treated in outpatient settings. Many providers solely rely on clinical judgement instead of a screening tool or evidence-based toolkit when a patient presents with depression symptoms, resulting in underdiagnosis and inappropriate treatment. Utilization of resources can help a provider appropriately screen, diagnose and treat an individual with depression. Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) is an evidence-based model intended to improve these measures. Studies from the literature support the efficacy of the SBIRT model …


Implementation Of Evidence-Based Chronic Non-Malignant Pain Management Protocol For Primary Care, Jenny E. Kipp Apr 2019

Implementation Of Evidence-Based Chronic Non-Malignant Pain Management Protocol For Primary Care, Jenny E. Kipp

Doctoral Projects

Chronic pain is the most prevalent health condition in the United States and is the most common reason people seek healthcare (Chang, Daubresse, Kruszewski & Alexander, 2014). In 2012, health care providers wrote 259 million prescriptions for opioid pain medications despite little change in self-reported pain prevalence (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 2016; Chang et al., 2014). Initiatives to prevent the under treatment of pain have resulted in overreliance on opioids to treat pain. As a consequence of opioid centric prescribing, an opioid epidemic has evolved with devastating consequences such as dependence, addiction and overdose deaths related to …


Improving Advance Care Planning Documentation In A Home Based Primary Care Program, Emily Radtke Apr 2019

Improving Advance Care Planning Documentation In A Home Based Primary Care Program, Emily Radtke

Doctoral Projects

Advance care planning (ACP) is an importance process of reflection and communication regarding one’s preferences for future health care (Hagen et al., 2015). Findings from research indicate that advance care planning supports patient autonomy, improves quality of end-of-life, and increases patient and provider satisfaction (Bischoff at al., 2013; Brinkman-Stoppelenburg et al., 2014). To promote advance care planning discussion, the Centers for Medicare and Medicare Services (2016) made a decision to compensate health care providers for face-to-face conversations regarding future treatment associated with serious illness, offering two new current procedural terminology billing codes for ACP. The Plan-Do-Study-Act model (AHRQ, 2018) was …


Evidence-Based Toolkit For Reduction Of Overdose Risk In Primary Care Patients On Opioid Therapy, Katelin A. Aris Apr 2019

Evidence-Based Toolkit For Reduction Of Overdose Risk In Primary Care Patients On Opioid Therapy, Katelin A. Aris

Doctoral Projects

Introduction: Opioids are powerful pain killing medications that can be highly addictive and can cause risk for overdose and even death (Michigan Prescription Drug and Opioid Task Force, 2015). Many primary care providers treat patients with acute and chronic pain, although it is recognized that many receive inadequate training in pain management and feel unprepared in the complexities of caring for these patients (Becker, Bair, Picchioni, Starrels, and Frank, 2018). To treat these patients safely, provider education and adherence to guidelines put forward by these initiatives is essential.

Methods: An evidence-based prescribing toolkit was devised using guidance from the literature …


Nurse Care Manager Impact On Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus At A Rural Primary Care Practice, Patrick Joswick Apr 2019

Nurse Care Manager Impact On Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus At A Rural Primary Care Practice, Patrick Joswick

Doctoral Projects

Background: Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus is a common diagnosis managed in the primary care setting. Patients with an uncontrolled state of the condition are most vulnerable to develop complications from the disease. Consequently, type 2 diabetes remains as the leading cause of end stage renal disease and nontraumatic limb amputations.

Objectives: To improve type 2 diabetes quality measures, improve documentation of quality measures, increase the continuity of care, and create a streamlined workflow and communication within an interdisciplinary team.

Methods: Quality improvement project to establish multifaceted management of type 2 diabetes. Data on the management of care was gathered pre-/post-implementation …


Implementation Of An Evidence Based Screening Protocol To Improve The Diagnosis Of Dementia In A Home-Based Primary Care Setting, Lauren Liesbeth Sutton Apr 2019

Implementation Of An Evidence Based Screening Protocol To Improve The Diagnosis Of Dementia In A Home-Based Primary Care Setting, Lauren Liesbeth Sutton

Doctoral Projects

Dementia is a major public health concern that is both debilitating and deleterious to those afflicted with its various forms. The number of those living with dementia is increasing exponentially as the population continues to rise, with 46.8 million people worldwide currently afflicted with dementia (Chow et al., 2018). Dementia causes cognitive impairment that is severe enough to affect everyday function (Chow et al., 2018). The impairment and disability resulting from dementia indicates a significant health problem in primary care. Findings from research studies indicate that prophylactic and periodic screening for dementia can heighten provider suspicion and translate into earlier …


Evaluation Of Processes And Procedures For Care Of The Opioid Recipient Patient In The Primary Care Setting, Anne Sproat Oct 2018

Evaluation Of Processes And Procedures For Care Of The Opioid Recipient Patient In The Primary Care Setting, Anne Sproat

Doctoral Projects

Introduction: Chronic non-cancer pain is far reaching, affecting over 100 million Americans (Zgierska et al., 2018). Opioids are commonly prescribed for chronic pain, with approximately 20% of patients presenting to primary care offices with symptoms of pain or pain-related diagnoses (Dowell, Haegerich, & Chou, 2016). As a result, opioid prescribing rates are increasing at a faster rate for primary care practice compared with other specialties (Dowell et al., 2016). Within the United States population, it is estimated that three percent to four percent of the adult population are prescribed long-term opioids for the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain (Dowell et …


Proposal Defense: Improving Patient Portal Adoption In Primary Care, Melissa Wagner Apr 2018

Proposal Defense: Improving Patient Portal Adoption In Primary Care, Melissa Wagner

Doctoral Projects

Introduction: Stage three of Meaningful Use (MU) is currently underway and is focused on promoting patient portal use. If the electronic medical record patient portal use is less than 25%, primary care providers face reductions in value-based reimbursements. National adoption rates from portal use remain under 27% with some providers averaging well below the needed 25%. The following practice question is proposed, “In a low-income urban adult clinic, how does an interactive electronic education intervention compared to no education intervention affect patient portal adoption rates?”

Objectives: The purpose of this project is to identify whether an electronic patient educational video …