1 / 36

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Coláiste Ríoga na Máinleá in Éirinn

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Coláiste Ríoga na Máinleá in Éirinn. Connected health: collaborative opportunities for ICON and academia Tom Fahey Professor of General Practice, RCSI Medical School & Principal Investigator, HRB Centre for Primary Care Research. Overview. Background

kyra-chavez
Download Presentation

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Coláiste Ríoga na Máinleá in Éirinn

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Royal College of Surgeons in IrelandColáiste Ríoga na Máinleá in Éirinn Connected health: collaborative opportunities for ICON and academia Tom Fahey Professor of General Practice, RCSI Medical School & Principal Investigator, HRB Centre for Primary Care Research

  2. Overview • Background • Collaborative opportunities • Exploring potential of large databases • Patient safety • Quality of care • Education and training of graduates

  3. Overview • Background • Collaborative opportunities • Exploring potential of large databases • Patient safety • Quality of care • Education and training of graduates

  4. My own background • Professor of General Practice, RCSI 2006 onwards • Medical graduate UCD, trained epidemiology & Public Health (TCD & Oxford) • Previously (UK 14 years) • Professor (University Dundee) • SL (University of Bristol) • L (University of Oxford)

  5. Roles • Professor & Head of Department • Principal investigator HRB Centre for Primary Care Research • Chair of Research, Irish College of General Practitioners • Other roles • Academic collaborator EU FP7 TRANSFoRm • Medical advisory group Irish Medicines Board

  6. Overview • Background • Collaborative opportunities • Exploring potential of large databases • Patient safety • Quality of care • Education and training of graduates

  7. GP Electronic Health Record (EHR)

  8. EHR • UK • Ireland

  9. Trial data query system

  10. Recruitment RCT

  11. Visualisation- patient recruitment

  12. Diagnostic code recoded- type 1 NIDDM

  13. Overview • Background • Collaborative opportunities • Exploring potential of large databases • Patient safety • Quality of care • Education and training of graduates

  14. TRANSFoRm- WP4 patient safety WP4 Evidence Repository Research Study Designer WT 5.2 GP EHRs With CDSS Study Criteria Design Clinical Evidence Service Evidence Management Tools Find Eligible Patient Research Study Management WT 4.5 Evidence Mining and Analysis Recruit Eligible Patient Evidence Analysis & Extraction Tool Study Data Management

  15. Overview • Background • Collaborative opportunities • Exploring potential of large databases • Patient safety • Quality of care • Education and training of graduates

  16. Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing (PIP) • PIP is prevalent in the older population (> 70 years) • Republic of Ireland 36% • Northern Ireland 34% • United Kingdom 29%

  17. The prevalence of the most common STOPP/START PIP indicators across three regions

  18. OPTI-SCRIPT study development

  19. Study overview PCRS – National Contemporaneous Control - Observational comparison to national prescribing data (376,858 patients, 2,000+ practices)

  20. OPTI-SCRIPT website

  21. OPTI-SCRIPT RCT results • Participants • 21 GP practices (32% cluster response rate) • 196 patients (37% response rate) • Minimisation

  22. Study design & methodology – cluster RCT • Primary outcome measure: • Proportion of patients with no PIP • Mean PIP per group • Data collection baseline & immediate post intervention • Between group differences: • Random effects logistic regression • Cluster mean • Random effects poisson regression • Process evaluation

  23. Outcome – Proportion with no PIP Adjusted odds ratio = 3.06 (95% CI 1.4,6.5; P=0.004)* *adjusted for gender, age, baseline PIP, number repeat medications, GP practice size

  24. National contemporaneous control – PCRS • Intervention period, Sep 2012 – August 2013 prevalence of 38% • Odds of having no PIP in OPTI-SCRIPT intervention compared to odds of having no PIP in the national PCRS cohort

  25. Overview • Background • Collaborative opportunities • Exploring potential of large databases • Patient safety • Quality of care • Education and training of graduates

  26. Overview • Background • Collaborative opportunities • Exploring potential of large databases • Patient safety • Quality of care • Education and training of graduates

  27. Discussion • Collaboration • Joint funding • HRB Centre renewal • Horizon 20:20 • Training of graduates

More Related