The implementation of a value-based learning health system for preventative care in Ontario, Canada.
Am J Cardiovasc Dis
; 13(2): 87-100, 2023.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-37213315
OBJECTIVE: While value-based learning health systems may address challenges associated with the integrative delivery of therapeutic lifestyle management in usual care, the extent to which they have been evaluated in real-world settings have remained limited. METHODS: To explore the feasibility and user-experiences, associated with the first-year implementation of a preventative Learning Health System (LHS), consecutive patients were evaluated following referral from primary and/or specialty care providers from the Halton and Greater Toronto Area in Ontario, Canada, between December 2020 and December 2021. The integration of a LHS into medical care was facilitated using a digital e-learning platform, and consisted of exercise, lifestyle, and disease-management counselling. The dynamic monitoring of user-data allowed patients and providers to modify goals, treatment plans, and care-delivery in real-time in accordance with patient engagement, weekly exercise, and risk-factor targets. All program costs were covered by the public-payer health care system using a physician fee-for-service payment model. Descriptive statistics evaluated attendance to prescheduled visits, drop-out rates, changes in self-reported weekly Metabolic Expenditure Task-Minutes (MET-MINUTES), perceived changes in health knowledge, lifestyle behaviours, health status, satisfaction with care, and programmatic costs. RESULTS: 378 of 437 patients (86.5%) enrolled in the 6-month program; The average age of patients was 61.2 ± 12.2, 156 (41.3%) of which were female and 140 (37.0%) with established coronary disease. After 1 year, 15.6% dropped out of the program. On average, weekly MET-MINUTES rose by 191.1 throughout the program (95% CI [331.82, 57.96], P=0.007), with increases most prominent among sedentary populations. Participants reported significant improvements in perceived health status and health knowledge, at a total health-care delivery cost of $517.70 per patient for a completed program. CONCLUSION: The implementation of an integrative preventative learning health system was feasible, with high patient engagement and favourable user-experiences. Further research is required to compare health outcomes against usual care.
Texto completo:
1
Bases de dados:
MEDLINE
Tipo de estudo:
Prognostic_studies
/
Risk_factors_studies
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Am J Cardiovasc Dis
Ano de publicação:
2023
Tipo de documento:
Article