Community-Engaged Practice Based Research: The Mayo Clinic Experience
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Transcript of Community-Engaged Practice Based Research: The Mayo Clinic Experience
Community-Engaged Practice Based
Research: The Mayo Clinic Experience
Paul V. Targonski, MD, PhD
Director, Mayo Clinic Health System Practice Based Research network
September 15, 2011
Brief Outline
• There is no such thing as translational research
• Community engagement is a set of universal principles beyond research
• Scientists can’t make the national research enterprise successful without some help
National Institutes of Health
• “The nation’s medical research agency” • ~27 institutes and centers• $30 billion annually• Funds approximately
• 50,000 competitive grants• 325,000 investigators• 3000 universities, medical schools and
research institutions• 6000 intramural scientists with 10% of budget
• the conversion of basic research advances into products that can be tested on humans.archives.who.int/prioritymeds/report/FinalRep/GlossaryREPFIN.doc
What is Translational Research?
• To improve human health, scientific discoveries must be translated into practical applications. Such discoveries typically begin at “the bench” with basic research — in which scientists study disease at a molecular or cellular level — then progress to the clinical level, or the patient's “bedside.”
http://nihroadmap.nih.gov/clinicalresearch/overview-translational.asp
What is Translational Research?
Scientists are increasingly aware that this bench-to-bedside approach to translational research is really a two-way street. Basic scientists provide clinicians with new tools for use in patients and for assessment of their impact, and clinical researchers make novel observations about the nature and progression of disease that often stimulate basic investigations.
The Traditional Biomedical Model
• 17 years from discovery to practice
• For the <15% of studies that actually make it that far
• And only 5% are applied in practice with their originally intended use
• Minoxidil and hair growth versus blood pressure control
• Hence the federal support of translational and practice-based research!
What is Translational Research?
• “Translational research includes two areas of translation. One is the process of applying discoveries generated during research in the laboratory, and in preclinical studies, to the development of trials and studies in humans. The second area of translation concerns research aimed at enhancing the adoption of best
practices in the community.”
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-RM-06-002.htmlInstitutional Clinical and Translational Science Award
Translational Research• T1 seeks to move a basic discovery into a candidate health
application.
• T2 assesses the value of T1 application for health practice leading to the development of evidence-based guidelines.
• T3 attempts to move evidence-based guidelines into health practice, through delivery, dissemination, and diffusion research.
• T4 seeks to evaluate the “real world” health outcomes of a T1 application in practice.
http://medicalcenter.osu.edu/research/translational_research/Pages/index.aspx
TRIP
Community Engagement?
What is practice based research?
• Practice-based research is a systematic, rigorous and collaborative inquiry by teams of healthcare providers, community experts, scientists and other stakeholders into the systems, methods, policies, programmatic applications and population-level outcomes of health care practice in order to discover new information, generate new ideas, and implement innovative solutions to the existing paradigms of care to further improve care to patients, populations, and communities.
Why Practice-Based Research?A Typical Month of Healthcare in the United States
Green LA et al: N Engl J Med 344(26):2021, 2001
Definitions• Practice-based research network: “A group of ambulatory
practices devoted principally to the primary care of patients. Typically, PBRNs draw on the experience and insight of practicing clinicians to identify and frame research questions whose answers can improve the practice of primary care. By linking these questions with rigorous research methods, the PBRN can produce research findings that are immediately relevant to the clinician and, in theory, more easily assimilated into everyday practice."
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, http://www.ahrq.gov/research/pbrn/pbrnfact.htm, last accessed June 2, 2011
United States PBRN EnvironmentNetworks
Medical
Dental
Nursing
Pharmacy
Public Health
Federal Funding:
NIH
AHRQ
CDC
MCHS PBRN
A large network of small affiliated/integrated practices
~1150 providers, ~75 practices, 9 hospitals, ~650k patients, in 3 states
• Vision: Healthier patients and communities through the scholarship of health practice.
• Mission: Solving the problems of health care practice to improve the health and health equity of patients and communities.
The vision, mission and membership reflects our definition of community and role.
Network Provider Comparison with MN/WI State Providers
Provider Characteristics Chi-Square df p-value
Age group 2.27 3 0.519
Gender 5.33 1 0.021
Years in practice 4.12 4 0.390
Specialty 15.46 8 0.051
MHS PBRN Survey: Participatory and Educational Research Interest
0 20 40 60 80 100
Clinical Trials
HC Cost/Financing
HC Access/Delivery
HC Quality/Outcomes
Pt oriented Disease Specific Studies
Records Based Disease Specific Studies
Top
ical
Are
as
Participatory Interest (%) Skills Development Interest (%)
Research Type % of respondentssomewhat very
interested interested
Clinical Trials 57% 26%
Research that examines the costor financing of health care 36% 24%
Research that examines access toand use/delivery of health care 41% 27%
Research that examines health carequality and health care outcomes 38% 40%
Disease-specific studies involvingdirect human subjects testing 46% 29%
Disease-specific studies involvingchart review (no direct subject contact) 45% 20%
Respondent Interest in Participation in Practice-Based and Translational Research
MHS PBRN Survey:
Interest in Research Roles
Among Respondents
45.1
74.1
71.7
65.3
63.9
41
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
Percent Somewhat or Very Interested in Role
Review proposals and provide feedback
Recruit participants for ongoing studies other than my own
Develop research ideas to share or for others to implement
Participate in others’ studies
Run an occasional study in an area that interests me
Run a sustainable program of research
MHS PBRN Survey: Previous Research Experience Among Respondents
10.8
16.7
56.6
59.4
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Percent with Previous Experience
Helped recruit participants toclinical research studies
Collaborated or served as a co-investigatorIn clinical research studies
Led studies (PI)
Other
Examples of “Other” Experiences:
• REP Studies
• Direct data collection
• Developed project but couldn’t get it funded
• Master’s thesis
• WREN office-based research participant
• Basic science research with NIH/AHA support
• Ran the PROS network for North Dakota
• IRB approved project, not taking off because of lack of funds
• Airborne allergens in Middle East
Motivation = Interest + Relevance• “I'd be very interested in clinical
effectiveness trials of various treatments, approaches, drugs, et cetera.”
• “If there was an interesting study being conducted. I probably would be able to find some time to participate.”
• “I think for me it would have to be meaningful and have to have come clinical aspect to it, whether it's at the evaluation stage or during.”
Research – Value to Practice• Both the Administrators and Providers spoke of the
value of research to the Health System• “You know value is often defined here as quality over cost and
if it increases quality it increases value. If it decreases costs it increases values. So if we can find things to do to good treatments and therapy cheaper you know we're enhancing value.” [Administrator]
• “We definitely see interest in the physicians primarily where it relates to practice innovations in clinical trials.” [Administrator]
• “If we look at clinical excellence as being a part of the mission, that could certainly help promote clinical excellence.” [Provider]
Research - Value to Practice
• “…I think that [research] actually helps to stimulate the people that are involved in it in the organization because it keeps us involved in thinking and trying to innovate and interested in improving care for our patients and for our system.”
• “I think it's beneficial to me because I believe it gives me an opportunity to provide some input into the organization and the way we operate and our degree of success…”
Levels of Research Engagement
Level 0... no involvement in research – but an expectation that one would support colleagues involved in research
Level 1... being aware of studies open at one’s site and willing to identify patients who may be appropriate for participation/ enrollment
Level 2... level 1 involvement plus willingness to be involved in data collection
Level 3... being a PI or co-PI on one or more studies
Level 4... greater involvement in research, e.g., site research leadership role
+ - Time
What is Community Engagement?
Definitions• Community: A community can be described as a group of
people who share some or all of the following: geographic boundaries; a sense of membership; culture and language; common norms, interests, or values; and common health risks or conditions (IOM, 1995; Jewkes and Murcott, 1996; Ruderman, 2000; Ricketts, 2001). Members of communities typically experience the shared reality of living or working in the same location or environment and so are in a position to influence and be influenced by the social, economic, and physical risk factors in that environment (Roussos and Fawcett, 2000; Kreuter et al., 2001). IOM, The Public’s Health in the 21st Century, 2002, pp178-179
What is Community Engagement?
Community engagement is a dimension of Public Participation.
In research, community engagement is a process of inclusive participation that supports mutual respect of values, strategies, and actions for authentic partnership of people affiliated with or self-identified by geographic proximity, special interest, or similar situations to address issues affecting the well-being of the community of focus.
Community engagement is a core element of any research effort involving communities. It requires academic members to become part of the community and community members to become part of the research team, thereby creating a unique working and learning environment before, during, and after the research.
NIH Council of Public Representativeshttp://copr.nih.gov/reports/Definitions_of_CE_and_PP_Revised_508.pdf
Definitions• Community Engagement: Applying institutional resources (e.g., knowledge
and expertise of students, faculty and staff, political position, buildings and land) to address and solve challenges facing communities through collaboration with these communities. The methods for community engagement of academic institutions include community service, service-learning, community-based participatory research, training and technical assistance, capacity-building and economic development. Community engagement is not necessarily scholarship.
Gelmon SB, Seifer SD, Kauper-Brown J and Mikkelsen M. (2005) Building Capacity for Community Engagement: Institutional Self-Assessment. Seattle, WA: Community-Campus Partnerships for Health. http://www.ccph.info
• Community Placed Research: Research that involves study procedures conducted in an organized community setting (outside an academic medical center). Involves a one time or short-term relationship between the investigator and the community, with limited community involvement beyond being a venue for recruiting research participants or for implementing research procedures. (U of MN)
Performance of Community Based Research, http://www.ctsi.umn.edu/community/assets/CommunityBasedResearchGuidance.pdf, last accessed June 2, 2011
Principles of Community Engagement
• Investigators and communities understand what community engagement in research means
• Strong community/investigator partnership
• Communities and investigators share power and responsibility equitably
• Equitable inclusion of diverse perspectives and populations
• Clear and relevant research goals
• Mutual benefit
• Capacity building
• Respect and recognition
• Continuous communications
• Transparent monitoring and evaluation process
• Appropriate policies regarding ownership and dissemination of results
• Translation of research findings into policies, interventions, or programs
• Sustain the relationship and the research outcomes
NIH Council of Public Representativeshttp://copr.nih.gov/reports/Definitions_of_CE_and_PP_Revised_508.pdf
“How” is NIH community engagement?
• NIH Director’s Council of Public Representatives
• NIH National Center of Research Resources?
• Clinical and Translational Science Awards
• Community Based Participatory Research
• Practice Based Research Networks
NIH: Values for Investigators Who Want to Engage Communities in Their Research• Investigators and
communities understand what community engagement in research means
• Strong community-investigator partnership
• Communities and investigators share power and responsibility equitably
• Equitable inclusion of diverse perspectives and populations
• Clear and relevant research goals
• Mutual benefit
• Capacity building
• Respect and recognition
• Continuous communications
• Transparent monitoring and evaluation process
• Appropriate policies regarding ownership and dissemination of results
• Translation of research findings into policies, interventions and programs
• Sustain the relationship and the research outcomes
NIH COPR: Community Engagement Framework for Development of Education/Training For Researchers
Challenges of Community Engagement
• Scientists•Engagement and Collaborative Skills•Community Expectations
•Academic•Institutional•Funder•Local partner
•Incentives/Professionalism•Resources
•Partners?•Funds•Methodologies
• Communities•Engagement Skills
•Collaboration•Organization•Fund of Research Knowledge
•Interest•Incentives•Resources
•Partners?•Time
Challenges for “CEPBR”• IRB issues (coverage, others)
• FWA support and community protections
• Many providers and many sites (many potential CBO contacts to manage)
• Geographic dispersion complicates communication and relationship-building
• Representativeness of networks and network CBO partnerships for generalization of results
• Disparity of expectations for timing and rigor
Challenges of Community Engagement
Approaches
• Bottom-up capacity for community idea generation
• Inventory of academic technical skills• Offer to communities as a
resource for project and program evaluation
• Community advisory boards
• Communication mechanism to solicit and provide feedback from communities
Approaches (cont)
• Identify network member champions who are engaged with community
• Clear mission/vision that involves work outside the medical practice
• Establishing network values and principles that promote and respect community partnership (COPR)
• PRINS-like inventory of communities
Example of Community Partnered Practice-Based Research: Community Health Workers in the
Advanced Transdisciplinary Health Care Home
• Partnerships with Community
• Skills/Methods Development
• Staff Career Development
• Community Capacity
• Expansion to other practices and grants
• Improved Practice Outcomes
• Team Care Best Practices
• HCH Certification Support
• State Policy Impact
• National Exposure
• Direct Impact on Practice and Community Health
Intended to explore how coordination of medical team models with community services could reduce health disparities
Improvements in preventive service and chronic disease management outcomes directly impacted practice modification
Practice-Based Research Network
Take home messages
• The translational research process is a paradigm shift
• But one that really can enhance moving discoveries into practice
• Community engagement can and should occur and add value to all research
• Incentives and resources must better align if community engagement is to improve the translation of research into practice
“Many people say that it is the intellect which makes a great scientist.
They are wrong: it is character.”- Albert Einstein
Thank You!