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Open Access 30-04-2024 | Original Research: Qualitative Research

Enhancing Primary Care and Mental Health Integration for Women Veterans with Complex Healthcare Needs Using Evidence-Based Quality Improvement

Authors: Kimberly S. Clair, PhD, MSPH, Elizabeth M. Yano, PhD, MSPH, Jacqueline J. Fickel, PhD, Julian Brunner, PhD, MPH, Ismelda Canelo, MPA, Alison Hamilton, PhD, MPH

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine

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Abstract

Background

Women Veterans with co-morbid medical and mental health conditions face persistent barriers accessing high-quality health care. Evidence-based quality improvement (EBQI) offers a systematic approach to implementing new care models that can address care gaps for women Veterans.

Objective

This study examines factors associated with the successful deployment of EBQI within integrated health systems to improve primary care for women Veterans with complex mental health needs.

Design

Following a 12-site (8 EBQI, 4 control) cluster randomized study to evaluate EBQI effectiveness, we conducted an in-depth case study analysis of one women’s health clinic that used EBQI to improve integrated primary care–mental health services for women Veterans.

Participants

Our study sample included providers, program managers, and clinic staff at a women Veteran’s health clinic that, at the time of the study, had one Primary Care and Mental Health Integration team and one women’s health primary care provider serving 800 women. We analyzed interviews conducted 12 months, 24 months, and 4 years post-implementation and call summaries between the clinic and support team.

Main Measures

We conducted qualitative thematic analysis of interview and call summary data to identify EBQI elements, clinic characteristics, and reported challenges and successes within project development and execution.

Key Results

The clinic harnessed core EBQI elements (multi-level stakeholder engagement, data-driven progress-monitoring, PDSA cycles, sharing results) to accomplish pre-defined project goals, strengthen inter-disciplinary partnerships, and bolster team confidence. Clinic characteristics that facilitated implementation success included prior QI experience and an organizational culture responsive to innovation, while lack of pre-existing guidelines and limited access to centralized databases posed implementation challenges.

Conclusions

Successful practice transformation emerges through the interaction of evidence-based methods and site-specific characteristics. Examining how clinic characteristics support or impede EBQI adaptation can facilitate efforts to improve care within integrated health systems.
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Metadata
Title
Enhancing Primary Care and Mental Health Integration for Women Veterans with Complex Healthcare Needs Using Evidence-Based Quality Improvement
Authors
Kimberly S. Clair, PhD, MSPH
Elizabeth M. Yano, PhD, MSPH
Jacqueline J. Fickel, PhD
Julian Brunner, PhD, MPH
Ismelda Canelo, MPA
Alison Hamilton, PhD, MPH
Publication date
30-04-2024
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-024-08737-3
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