PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Improving quality of preventive care at a student-run free clinic.

  • Neel M Butala,
  • Harry Chang,
  • Leora I Horwitz,
  • Mary Bartlett,
  • Peter Ellis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081441
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. e81441

Abstract

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Student-run clinics increasingly serve as primary care providers for patients of lower socioeconomic status, but studies show that quality of care at student-run clinics has room for improvement.To examine change in provision of preventive services in a student-run free clinic after implementation of a student-led QI intervention involving prompting.Review of patient charts pre- and post-intervention, examining adherence to screening guidelines for diabetes, dyslipidemia, HIV, and cervical cancer.Adherence to guidelines among eligible patients increased after intervention in 3 of 4 services examined. Receipt of HIV testing increased from 33% (80/240) to 48% (74/154; p = 0.004), fasting lipid panel increased from 53% (46/86) to 72% (38/53; p = 0.033), and fasting blood glucose increased from 59% (27/46) to 82% (18/22; p = 0.059).This student-run free clinic implemented a student-led QI intervention that increased provision of prevention. Such a model for QI could extend to other student-run clinics nationally.