THE AAMC ACADEMIC CHRONIC CARE COLLABORATIVE: FAMILY MEDICINE’S PARTICIPATION AND LESSONS LEARNED =================================================================================================== * Elizabeth G. Baxley * Michele Stanek Beginning in June 2005, a cohort of 48 teams assembled to participate in the first chronic care collaborative that enrolled teams only from the nation’s teaching hospitals. The Academic Chronic Care Collaborative (ACCC), formed through a partnership between the AAMC’s Institute for Improving Clinical Care and the RWJF’s Improving Chronic Illness Care program had dual goals: to improve both the care of patients with chronic illness and the education of health care teams providing care in academic settings. Specific goals of the collaborative included facilitation of evidence-based improvements, partnership with improvement-focused institutions, identification of improvement innovators practicing in academic settings, convening of these innovators and other experts to craft strategies to move the academic medical community toward better care and learning, and supporting these faculty to develop their academic careers around healthcare improvement. Teams, representing 22 distinct academic centers, spent the next 15 months implementing changes in the care of selected chronic conditions, including diabetes, asthma, and COPD, using Wagner’s Chronic Care Model. Eleven teams were from family medicine training programs, including Southern Illinois University, Lehigh Valley Hospital Network, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Duke University Medical Center, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, University of Louisville Health Sciences Center, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, NEOUCOM’s Summa Health System, Albert Einstein College of Medicine’s Montefiore Medical Center, and University of Kentucky Medical School. The Collaborative, led by co-chairs Dr David Stevens and Dr Ed Wagner and Director Connie Sixta, employed the Breakthrough Series Collaborative learning model developed by the Institute for Health-care Improvement (IHI), in which multidisciplinary teams attended a kick-off session, 2 face-to-face interactive learning sessions, a virtual learning session, and a congress that coincided with the AAMC Annual Meeting. Between each learning session, teams utilized change packages that were comprised of evidence-based strategies structured around the CCM. Participating teams learned from each other and had access to expert advice. Departments with participating ACCC teams substantially supported their teams. Participating teams were expected to perform pre-work activities; attend all learning sessions; provide a physician champion; test improvement strategies; use a patient registry to monitor and report outcomes and submit monthly progress reports. Teams were also expected to develop curriculum for learners that paralleled their work in adopting the CCM and to test the impact of these curricular changes. Early data from the collaborative demonstrate high enthusiasm for this project, as evidenced by the large percentage of on-time monthly reports, high-level participation on monthly conference calls, high retention rates of champion physicians, and heavy listserv activity. Mechanisms that were utilized by teams to improve clinical outcomes included development of interventions to impact clinical inertia, extensive use of provider-specific data, a major focus on enhancing self management support, a realization that work and improvement occurs best among multidisciplinary teams, and extensive use of group and planned visits. Changes in resident curriculum included changes in both didactic and hands-on clinical training. Participating programs have already cited a variety of benefits from ACCC participation, including a rethinking of the way patient care is provided that is more consistent with the FFM Model (ie, group visits, self-management, multidisciplinary teams, community effort). Additional benefits have included a positive impact on departmental strategic planning; greater resident appreciation of team care; an inclusion of nontraditional roles, such as data analyst into the care process; greater group learning about the challenges of change management; enhanced connection between senior leaders and teams; and a positive impact on resident recruiting. Additionally, quality improvement work was recognized as rigorous research and a viable career focus. Lastly, there was a feeling that the collaborative helped advance the diffusion of innovation across departments within the same campus. Several spinoff efforts have resulted from this initial academic collaborative. The AAMC’s Institute for Improving Clinical Care (IICC), in partnership with the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and the Delmarva Foundation for Medical Care, coordinated an Academic Rapid Response Collaborative for improving acute care in academic settings. In May 2006, 10 teams from North and South Carolina began participating in a 2-year collaborative to improve diabetes and CHF care in family medicine residency programs in the Carolinas. Funding from Fullerton Foundation and Duke Endowment support the design team, which includes leadership from the UNC Department of Family Medicine and USCSCOM Department of Family and Preventive Medicine. And, in February of this year, the California Academic Chronic Care Collaborative began their work to improve chronic illness care for persons who receive their care in academic health systems and to assure that clinical education occurs in an exemplary environment with teams from 8 California institutions. * © 2007 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.