Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare (Oct 2021)

The Value Transformation Framework: Applied to Diabetes Control in Federally Qualified Health Centers

  • Modica C,
  • Lewis JH,
  • Bay RC

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 14
pp. 3005 – 3014

Abstract

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Cheryl Modica,1 Joy H Lewis,2 R Curtis Bay3 1National Association of Community Health Centers, Bethesda, MD, USA; 2Medicine and Public Health, SOMA Department of Public Health, School of Osteopathic Medicine in Arizona, A.T. Still University, Meza, AZ, USA; 3Department of Interdisciplinary Health Sciences, Arizona School of Health Sciences, A.T. Still University, Mesa, AZ, USACorrespondence: Cheryl ModicaNational Association of Community Health Centers, Inc., 7501 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 1100W, Bethesda, MD, 20814, USATel +1 301 310 2250Email [email protected]: Diabetes and pre-diabetes impact more than 114 million Americans. Federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) provide care to some of the most high-risk and underinsured individuals throughout the US, twenty-one percent of whom report being told they have diabetes, compared to 11% of the general adult population. It is widely agreed our health care system requires a transformation to effectively address diabetes and its complications.Objective: By applying the Value Transformation Framework (VTF) in health centers, the National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) aims to show improvements in diabetes control. This systematic strategy to transform the way health centers operate can lead to improvements in health outcomes, patient and staff experiences, costs, and equity (Quintuple Aim). Special attention is paid to the health centers’ infrastructure, people systems and care delivery systems.Methods: Evidence-based diabetes interventions, the learning community model, and the VTF were used together to drive system improvements and activate proven diabetes control practices within eight health centers. Multidisciplinary teams at select health centers in Georgia and Iowa, with their partner primary care associations, participated in this NACHC-led quality improvement project.Results: During the one-year intervention (January 2017–December 2017), the mean raw percentage of patients with HbA1c Poor Control decreased from 50.9% (range, 23.7– 70.4%) in January to 27.5% (range, 13.6– 37.4%) in December. This represents a relative improvement in diabetes control of 46%. The 1-year-intervention data also showed trends in the desired direction with statistically significant improvements related to the following interventions: a formal written clinical policy, standing orders, patient recall/outreach, performance data shared at the provider/team-level, and performance data shared at the site/organization level.Conclusion: A conceptual model focused on transforming health center systems, organized by the NACHC Value Transformation Framework and supported by a strong learning community, can lead to better diabetes control outcomes among patients seen at health centers.Keywords: vulnerable populations, hemoglobin A1c, quality improvement, health systems, interdisciplinary care

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