Improving the Quality of Care for Adults With Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Last updated on July 2021Recruitment
- Recruitment Status
- Enrolling by invitation
- Estimated Enrollment
- 5000
Summary
- Conditions
- Crohn's Disease
- Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
- Ulcerative Colitis
- Design
- Observational Model: OtherTime Perspective: Prospective
Participation Requirements
- Age
- Between 18 years and 125 years
- Gender
- Both males and females
Description
To demonstrate the impact of an Adult Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Learning Health System approach the study collaborators will design, build, implement, and evaluate in up to 90 IBD care sites the the following four key components of the IBD Learning Health System: 1) a Health Information Techn...
To demonstrate the impact of an Adult Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Learning Health System approach the study collaborators will design, build, implement, and evaluate in up to 90 IBD care sites the the following four key components of the IBD Learning Health System: 1) a Health Information Technology (HIT) environment that can "feed-forward" PROs and clinical data to be used at the point of care and integrated into a registry (IBD Plexus); 2) decision-support dashboards for use by patients and clinicians in real time to coproduce care; 3) meaningful reports for patients and clinicians; and 4) multi-stakeholder collaborative networks for improvement and research. Prior work from Sweden and the US show that successful uptake of the model can offer important benefits. Patients will be able to use web-based tools to monitor their health and manage their care, securely share data with clinicians in a timely manner, visualize outcomes that matter to them, and compare their results to other people. Clinicians will have new information that can improve their ability to track patient outcomes and costs over time; use PRO data to support pre-visit planning, shared decision-making at the point of care, and post-visit monitoring; and receive comparative performance reports to support quality improvement, public reporting, and professional development. Researchers will benefit by having PROs and cost data added to data registries to support clinical, translational, and comparative effectiveness research.
Tracking Information
- NCT #
- NCT02791854
- Collaborators
- Crohn's and Colitis Foundation
- Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
- Dartmouth College
- Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Corey Siegel, MD, MS Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center Principal Investigator: Gil Melmed, MD, MS Cedars-Sinai Medical Center