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  Vol. 159 No. 5, May 2005 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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 •Asthma
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Impact of a Quality Improvement Program on Care and Outcomes for Children With Asthma

Charles J. Homer, MD, MPH; Peter Forbes, MA; Lisa Horvitz, SM; Laura E. Peterson, BSN, SM; David Wypij, PhD; Patricia Heinrich, RN, BSN

Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2005;159:464-469.

Objective  To test a quality improvement intervention, a learning collaborative based on the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Breakthrough Series methodology, specifically intended to improve care and outcomes for patients with childhood asthma.

Design  Randomized trial in primary care practices.

Setting  Practices in greater Boston, Mass, and greater Detroit, Mich.

Participants  Forty-three practices, with 13 878 pediatric patients with asthma, randomized to intervention and control groups.

Intervention  Participation in a learning collaborative project based on the Breakthrough Series methodology of continuous quality improvement.

Main Outcome Measures  Change from baseline in the proportion of children with persistent asthma who received appropriate medication therapy for asthma, and in the proportion of children whose parent received a written management plan for their child’s asthma, as determined by telephone interviews with parents of 631 children.

Results  After adjusting for state, practice size, child age, sex, and within-practice clustering, no overall effect of the intervention was found.

Conclusions  This methodologically rigorous assessment of a widely used quality improvement technique did not demonstrate a significant effect on processes or outcomes of care for children with asthma. Potential deficiencies in program implementation, project duration, sample selection, and data sources preclude making the general inference that this type of improvement program is ineffective. Additional rigorous studies should be undertaken under more optimal settings to assess the efficacy of this method for improving care.


Author Affiliations: National Initiative for Children’s Health Care Quality, Boston, Mass (Dr Homer and Mss Horvitz, Peterson and Heinrich); Department of Pediatrics (Dr Homer), Clinical Research Program (Drs Forbes and Wypij), and Department of Cardiology (Dr Wypij), Children’s Hospital, Boston; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, and Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston (Dr Wypij).



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