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Research ArticleResearch

Improving prevention in primary care

Evaluating the sustainability of outreach facilitation

William Hogg, Jacques Lemelin, Isabella Moroz, Enrique Soto and Grant Russell
Canadian Family Physician May 2008; 54 (5) 712-720;
William Hogg
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Jacques Lemelin
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Isabella Moroz
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Enrique Soto
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Grant Russell
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This article has a correction. Please see:

  • Correction - June 01, 2008

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE To assess the extent to which advances in preventive care delivery, achieved in primary care practices through outreach facilitation, could be sustained over time after purposefully redirecting the focus of practice physicians and staff away from prevention and toward a new content area in need of improvement—chronic illness management.

DESIGN Before-and-after study.

SETTING Primary care networks and family health networks in Ontario.

PARTICIPANTS A volunteer sample of 30 primary care practices recruited from 99 eligible sites.

INTERVENTION Outreach visits directed at modifying physician behaviour were delivered by trained nurse facilitators using practice-tailored systems strategies. For the first 12 months, the intervention focused on improving delivery of preventive care, after which facilitation of chronic illness management was introduced for another 3 to 9 months.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Changes in practices’ performance rates for selected preventive maneuvers (according to recommendations of the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care) between baseline and follow-up, conducted 3 to 9 months after the end of the prevention intervention, measured from chart reviews for those maneuvers likely to be recorded and from telephoneinterviews with patients for lifestyle counseling.

RESULTS Four of the 30 practices dropped out of the study. In the remaining practices, at the postintervention follow-up, there was an increase in the delivery of the appropriate grade A (19.3%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 10.4% to 28.3%) and B (9.3%, 95% CI 5.4% to 13.2%) maneuvers, accompanied by a reduction in inappropriate grade D maneuvers (−15.9%, 95% CI −22.1% to −9.6%), for an absolute improvement of 12% (P < .0001) in the overall preventive care performance, as determined by a chart audit. We found no changes in the provision of lifestyle counseling maneuvers measured from telephone interviews with patients (1.3%, 95% CI 1.0% to 3.7%).

CONCLUSION The tailored, multifaceted intervention delivered by nurse facilitators was effective in producing significant improvements in preventive care performance that extended beyond the prevention intervention period.

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Canadian Family Physician: 54 (5)
Canadian Family Physician
Vol. 54, Issue 5
1 May 2008
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Improving prevention in primary care
William Hogg, Jacques Lemelin, Isabella Moroz, Enrique Soto, Grant Russell
Canadian Family Physician May 2008, 54 (5) 712-720;

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Improving prevention in primary care
William Hogg, Jacques Lemelin, Isabella Moroz, Enrique Soto, Grant Russell
Canadian Family Physician May 2008, 54 (5) 712-720;
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