Wednesday, November 11, 2009

The Next Step in Our Partnership

The INQRI program and the Donaghue Foundation are pleased to announce the next step in our collaboration. We are continuing the discussion we began at the Funders Forum with a series of webinars focused entirely on translation. This series will begin in January, 2010. Please click the links below to pre-register and contact Heather Kelley if you have any questions.

Translating Research into Policy
Speaker: Ben Milder, Burness Communications
Date: January 25, 2010: 2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. EST
Click here to register.

Implementing the Transitional Care Model
Speakers: Mary Naylor, Ph.D., R.N., FAAN, University of Pennsylvania and Randall Krakauer, M.D., Aetna
Date: March 2, 2010: 4:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. EST
Click here to register.

Diffusion of New Ideas - What Works?
Speaker: Elizabeth Bradley, Ph.D., Yale University
Date: April 7, 2010: 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. EST
Click here to register.

Implementation Science and QUERI
Speaker: Brian Mittman, Ph.D., VA Quality Enhancement Research Initiative(QUERI)
Date: April 20, 2010: 2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. EST
Click here to register.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Does Improving Quality Save Money?

QUERI Implementation Practice Seminar

Does improving quality save money? A review of research and research methods.
Presentation by John Ovretveit, PhD
Monday, November 9, 12:00pm - 1:30pm ET

** Advance registration is now required **

Register for the session on November 9

Check your Live Meeting settings in advance

Questions? Email cyberseminar@va.gov

This is a QUERI Implementation Practice Seminar Presentation. For more information on these and other HSR&D Cyber Seminars go to http://www.hsrd.research.va.gov/for_researchers/cyber_seminars.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Seminar Series: Ethel Donaghue Center for Translating Research into Practice and Policy

Are you near the University of Connecticut Health Center? If so, check out this seminar series...




The TRIPP Center series focuses on practice-oriented translational research, seeking to improve processes of care and health outcomes by accelerating the transfer of evidence-based medical practice into the community. This year the emphasis is on translational informatics. We have invited leaders in each area to present and provide our audience with the opportunity to learn about their research.

Seminars are held Thursdays at 12 noon at the Low Learning Center at the University of Connecticut Health Center
* Except November 19th which will be simulcast from Storrs to the TRIPP Conference Room located in Dowling South.

Nov. 19, 2009
Jeremey Grimshaw, MBChB, PhD, FRCGP
Building the Science of Knowledge Translation
University of Ottowa * Co-sponsorship with CHIP at Storrs

Dec. 3, 2009
Victor Villagra, MD, FACP
Public Utility Model for Chronic Care
Health & Technology Vector, Inc.

Jan. 14, 2010
William Rollow , MD, MPH HIT
Medical Home & Perspective of Payor
Emblem Health

Feb. 4, 2010
Richard Shiffman, MD, FAAP
Decision Support In Pediatric Asthma
Yale University

Mar. 11, 2010
Mr. Mark Borton
HIT Solutions for Primary Care
Equity Health Partners, LLC

Apr. 8, 2010
Lisa Kern, MD
Pay-for-Performance, Medical Home Implementation and Health Care Quality
Weill Cornell Medical College


For more information on the seminar series, please click here.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

An update from the declaration committee...

Guiding Principles and Implementation Strategies for the Funders Forum Group

A subgroup of volunteers from the Funders Forum has met to begin drafting what could become a “Proclamation” based on the ideas and perspectives that were presented by participants at the meeting this past July. Our work at this point has involved a review of the notes from our July meeting and some telephone and email discussions to develop a draft proposal of what we are referring to as principles and implementation strategies for the group to consider. These priniciples are neither formalized nor finalized and we will be presenting the draft to the entire group within the next two months.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Joining together to assert our declaration!

Thank you to those who have volunteered to serve on the committee for our "declaration" project. If you have not yet volunteered, it's not too late. Please email Heather Kelley if you are interested.

As this group begins their work, we will be sharing their products via this blog... so keep your eye on this space!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Lynne Garner on "Dealing with Scale"

A short while ago, Geoffrey Canada, President and CEO of the Harlem Children’s Zone, the award-winning comprehensive program of health, parenting and educational services, was on NPR’s Talk of the Nation, and he said something that caught my ear. Mr. Canada explained that before its founding he had been working in programs that served 100 or 200 children at a time. It was important work but didn’t come close to meeting the needs of the thousands of children that could benefit from those services. He said “dealing with scale is one of the issues we need to tackle in this nation.” A short while later, in discussing the inspiration for the Harlem Children’s Zone, he said it was “not some kind of a brilliant Eureka” but rather putting into place what is already known to be effective in a way that works.

These two issues – implementing what we already know to be effective and doing so on a scale to benefit many people – are two of the biggest challenges to creating benefit through research. After considering our own history of grantmaking and listening to the experience of others, it’s clear that there are at least three interrelated conditions at the source of this difficulty.
  • There’s lot of money for research but precious little to implement research findings.
  • It’s nobody’s “job.”
  • Most research is done in academic centers, whose incentives work against developing an idea far enough along for the findings to be put into a useable “product.”

Because these conditions are larger than Donaghue can change on its own, we are looking for opportunities to work with other funders. And although we aren’t spending a lot on new grants now, we are working to shape our grantmaking programs to be more focused on these issues. Maybe this involves starting with those who have the health care problems and then looking for research-based solutions. Maybe the research team should be a partnership with those who are ultimately the end users. And maybe, like Geoffrey Canada and the Harlem Children’s Zone, we need to be willing to stick with one issue for several years in order to make real change.

But this is only my take on the topic – what’s yours?

Lynne Garner is Trustee and President of the Donaghue Foundation

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

An Invitation from the Donaghue Foundation

The Donaghue Foundation would like to invite you to participate in their 2nd Annual Andrews Lecture Series, with guest speaker, Karen Barrow. The event is being held on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 at The Anlyan Center, Yale School of Medicine, 300 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 4:00p.m.-5:00p.m. A reception will follow in the atrium.

To honor Ray Andrews' stewardship of the Donaghue Foundation from 1993 through 2007, the Trustees established an annual lecture series in his name that focuses on the voice of the patient. This lecture series gives expression to the patient's experience from a variety of perspectives.

Karen Barrow is the creator of "Patient Voices" for the New York Times on the web. Patient Voices features real stories from people coping with everything from attention deficit disorder to pancreatic cancer. In each installment of "Patient Voices," six to ten individuals living with a particular ailment share their experiences.

Ms. Barrow captures these very personal stories through recorded interviews and photographs that appear regularly on the The New York Times Well Blog. Karen Barrow holds a MA in biomedical journalism from New York University and a BA in biology from Cornell University. To read more information on Patient Voices click here.

This lecture is open to the public. Please call or email the Foundation at 860.521.9011 or conference@donaghue.org if you plan to attend so we can properly prepare for the reception.