培养下一代学习型卫生系统科学家

IF 2.6 Q2 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Paula M. Lozano, Meghan Lane-Fall, Patricia D. Franklin, Russell L. Rothman, Ralph Gonzales, Michael K. Ong, Michael K. Gould, Timothy J. Beebe, Christianne L. Roumie, Jeanne-Marie Guise, Felicity T. Enders, Christopher B. Forrest, Eneida A. Mendonca, Joanna L. Starrels, Urmimala Sarkar, Lucy A. Savitz, JeanHee Moon, Mark Linzer, James D. Ralston, Francis D. Chesley Jr.
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引用次数: 4

摘要

学习型健康系统(LHS)将科学、信息、激励、利益相关者和文化结合起来,以实现持续改进和创新。医疗保健研究和质量局和以患者为中心的结果研究所设计了一项K12倡议,以增加LHS科学家的数量。我们描述了由11个资助的卓越中心(coe)开发的方法,以促进学者和卫生系统领导者之间的伙伴关系,并提供指导的研究培训。方法自2018年以来,coe招募了教师,获得了机构资源,与卫生系统合作,开发和实施了课程,招募了学者,并提供了指导培训。每个COE的项目主管提供了关于项目背景、学者特征、利益相关者参与、学者在卫生系统伙伴关系中的经验、项目完成后的角色以及主要培训挑战的描述性数据。迄今为止,11个coe已与卫生系统合作培训了110名学者。9个(82%)项目与退伍军人事务卫生系统合作,9个(82%)项目与安全网提供者合作。临床训练的学者(n = 87;79%)包括70名内科医生和17名其他临床学科的学者。非临床医生(n = 29;26%)代表不同的领域,以人口健康科学为主。利益相关者参与有助于学者了解卫生系统和患者/家庭的需求和优先事项,使他们有机会进行嵌入式研究,改善结果,并提高将研究方法和发现转化为实践的技能。挑战包括在有限的计划时间内支持学者克服可能破坏项目的障碍,这些障碍包括获取数据的延迟、与covid -19相关的障碍和组织优先事项的转变。这一新颖的培训项目开展了四年,有证据表明,无论是在传统学术方面,还是在沿着职业轨迹前进方面,学者们都取得了成就,这些成就有可能引领和加速卫生系统的转型变革。未来的LHS培训工作应侧重于可持续性,包括对学者活动的组织支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Training the next generation of learning health system scientists

Training the next generation of learning health system scientists

Introduction

The learning health system (LHS) aligns science, informatics, incentives, stakeholders, and culture for continuous improvement and innovation. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute designed a K12 initiative to grow the number of LHS scientists. We describe approaches developed by 11 funded centers of excellence (COEs) to promote partnerships between scholars and health system leaders and to provide mentored research training.

Methods

Since 2018, the COEs have enlisted faculty, secured institutional resources, partnered with health systems, developed and implemented curricula, recruited scholars, and provided mentored training. Program directors for each COE provided descriptive data on program context, scholar characteristics, stakeholder engagement, scholar experiences with health system partnerships, roles following program completion, and key training challenges.

Results

To date, the 11 COEs have partnered with health systems to train 110 scholars. Nine (82%) programs partner with a Veterans Affairs health system and 9 (82%) partner with safety net providers. Clinically trained scholars (n = 87; 79%) include 70 physicians and 17 scholars in other clinical disciplines. Non-clinicians (n = 29; 26%) represent diverse fields, dominated by population health sciences. Stakeholder engagement helps scholars understand health system and patient/family needs and priorities, enabling opportunities to conduct embedded research, improve outcomes, and grow skills in translating research methods and findings into practice. Challenges include supporting scholars through roadblocks that threaten to derail projects during their limited program time, ranging from delays in access to data to COVID-19-related impediments and shifts in organizational priorities.

Conclusions

Four years into this novel training program, there is evidence of scholars' accomplishments, both in traditional academic terms and in terms of moving along career trajectories that hold the potential to lead and accelerate transformational health system change. Future LHS training efforts should focus on sustainability, including organizational support for scholar activities.

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来源期刊
Learning Health Systems
Learning Health Systems HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
22.60%
发文量
55
审稿时长
20 weeks
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