Showing posts with label Donaghue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donaghue. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2013

Grant Opportunity: Applying Behavioral Economics to Perplexing Problems in Health and Healthcare

Applying Behavioral Economics to Perplexing Problems in Health and Healthcare is a partnership with The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to fund approximately five awards of up to $200,000 for projects will last up to two years each. Through this funding opportunity, RWJF and Donaghue are particularly interested in research proposals that test innovative solutions to the challenge of reducing the use of low-value services in health care and for which academic teams collaborate with an outside organization, corporation, or partner that has a population or infrastructure that can be used to test pioneering and promising behavioral economic approaches. This funding is intended to support initiatives that have real potential of being used by these organizations if they prove to be effective.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Sharing the Road with Friends

Lynne Garner, PhD

As a funder of research that will “promote practical benefit for improving health,” Donaghue has an uphill road to climb. Sure, competently and ethically funding research is a big job, but it’s one that I think we’ve done fairly well. But funding the type of research that will lead to actually improving health and healthcare? Now that’s a far greater challenge.

As we work on this challenge, partnering with others who share this same passion is a real help. Though INQRI and Donaghue each have their own ways of developing new knowledge and learning how that knowledge can make an impact, we’ve found several ways to work together on those goals:

Host a Funders Form – The question of why knowledge from research doesn’t more readily get used by health care providers, systems and consumers is too frequently laid at the doorstep of researchers and their institutions. Certainly, there are a lot of answers to be found there, such as poorly aligned rewards and the heavily-resourced intervention being tested that can’t be sustained without a research grant. But funders need to look at themselves for answers, too. What expectations do we require or discourage that later impacts implementation? Are funding cycles too short to make a real impact? Do we focus on research that is more theory-driven than reality-driven? These are some of the themes explored during a two-day forum of over 20 funders hosted by INQRI and Donaghue in 2009.

Use Stakeholders – And speaking of how funders can shape their programs to enhance the uptake of research findings, INQRI was an innovator in requiring their researchers to work with practice and policy stakeholders through the course of the research project and beyond. The impact of these stakeholder’s perspectives is clear when INQRI researchers describe their work. Learned from INQRI’s example, Donaghue has incorporated stakeholders in our programs and review panels.

Try Out New Research Models – One of Donaghue’s goals is to work with others to test new ideas in grantmaking and health research. So we were delighted when RWJF and INQRI asked us to join the Future of Nursing Funders’ Community. By using an online portal and quick review of the proposals’ match with the program requirements, the community increases the efficiency of researchers applying for funds and of grantmakers looking to identify relevant opportunities.

A journey is always better if you can share the road with a friend, and Donaghue thanks INQRI for their work on these important issues. Donaghue welcomes - and I’ll bet INQRI does, too - others who want to work on them with us.

Lynne Garner, PhD, is the President and Trustee for the Donaghue Foundation. 

This post is part of our week-long blog carnival focused on the Medical Care supplement.  Click here to access all posts in this carnival.

Friday, January 18, 2013

Donaghue Event: Beyond Eureka!

Registration is open now for the Donaghue Foundation's Beyond Eureka! 2013 conference, which will explore the role of science in our society today by highlighting some of the key issues and trends shaping the way that science is carried out and what this means for the future.

The keynote speakers will offer a historical perspective on modern science, talk about internal and external pressures on the conduct of science, discuss how the public views science and scientists and why science literacy and citizen involvement in the conduct of science are so important in our world today. The panel and audience discussion that follows will explore ways we can all engage in answering the question "How is science serving us?"

Friday May 3, 2013
7:30 AM to 12:30 PM EDT
Hartford Marriott Farmington
15 Farm Springs Road
Farmington, CT

Click here to register.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Upcoming Event: The Voice of the Patient

On Tuesday, October 9, 2012, the Donaghue Foundation will be hosting its fifth and final event in their Andrews Lecture Series, which honors the stewardship of their foundation by Ray Andrews from 1993-2007.

Sue Sheridan will present "The Voice of the Patient: Now making a difference in treatment, research and patient safety."

Sheridan is the Deputy Director for Patient Engagement at the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) and is responsible for creating networks and engaging patients across the nation to provide broad-based input on the development and execution of PCORI’s research. Sheridan became involved in patient safety after her family experienced two serious medical system failures. In 2003, Sheridan co-founded Consumers Advancing Patient Safety (CAPS), a nonprofit organization that seeks a safe, compassionate and just health care system through proactive partnership between consumers and providers of care. Sheridan served as President of CAPS from 2003-2010. From 2004-2011, she led the World Health Organization’s Patients for Patient Safety initiative, which embraces the collective wisdom of the patient, patient empowerment and patient-centered care.

For more details about the event, please visit the Donaghue Foundation's website.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Recap of the Donaghue Foundation's "Beyond Eureka!" Conference

Highlights from Donaghue's "Beyond Eureka!" conference held on April 21, 2010 are now available on the Donaghue website.

More than 350 conference attendees explored the theme of Why is getting healthy so hard? And what we can do about it with keynote speakers Dan Ariely, behavioral economist and bestselling author, and Val Curtis, cultural anthropologist from London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a founder of the Global Public-Private Partnership for Handwashing with Soap.

Click here to watch video clips and see photos from the event.


For more information about the Donaghue Foundation and past conferences please visit their website or email the Foundation at conference@donaghue.org.

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On July 8 and 9, 2009, the Donaghue Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Initiative hosted a health funders forum in Princeton, NJ. For more information on this unique event, "Creating Opportunities and Breaking Down Barriers to Adoption," please contact Heather Kelley.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Diffusion of New Ideas - What Works?



Special thanks to Dr. Elizabeth Bradley for today's webinar presentation, "Diffusion of New Ideas - What Works?" If you missed the session, please visit the INQRI website to either:

Download the slides as a PDF, or
View the presentation from your desktop.


The Translation Series is co-sponsored by the Donaghue Foundation. For more information on INQRI's collaboration with Donaghue, please visit the Funders Forum blog.

The next session in this series will be held on April 20 at 2:00 p.m. ET. "Implementation Science and QUERI" will be presented by Brian Mittman, Ph.D., VA Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI).
Click
here to register.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Diffusion of New Ideas - What Works?

Looking for tips on how to successfully translate research into practice? Then join us one week from today for the next webinar in our Translation Series:

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




The Translation Series is co-sponsored by the Donaghue Foundation. For more information on INQRI's collaboration with Donaghue, please visit the Funders Forum blog.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Translating Research into Practice: The Transitional Care Model

Special thanks to INQRI director Mary Naylor and INQRI national advisory committee member Randall Krakauer for presenting yesterday's webinar: "Translating Research into Practice: The Transitional Care Model."  Thank you, also, to all of our very engaged participants.  The event was well attended and we enjoyed a rich question and answer period. 

If you missed the webinar, you can view it on your desktop or download the slides.

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This session was part of the "Translation Series," co-sponsored by the Donaghue Foundation.  Our next session will be held in April:

"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.

For more information on our collaboration with Donaghue, please click here.

Monday, January 25, 2010

The First Translation Webinar was a Success

Thank you to Ben Milder, Elizabeth Wenk and Andrew Peters from Burness Communications for kicking off our Translation webinar series!

If you missed their presentation on how to "Translate Research into Policy," please click here to view the presentation on your desktop. You can also download or request the related materials:
This series is co-sponsored by the INQRI program and the Donaghue Foundation.
Upcoming Sessions:

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.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Next Webinar - Monday

You've gone through the process of writing your grant proposal, made it through the various application stages, received your funding, completed your work and now wonder to yourself... "Now what?"


If you are wondering about how to reach policy makers and how to encourage evidence-based decision-making, tune in next Monday for the first INQRI-Donaghue webinar:

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.

Monday, July 27, 2009

How do medical errors happen? And what can be done?



Millions of people suffer every year from mistakes in health care. In a presentation from the IHI Open School, Lucian Leape explains why those mistakes happen — and how to prevent them.

The INQRI program is committed to understanding and preventing medication errors. Several of our teams are focused on this important work:

  • "Examining the Impact of Nursing Structures and Processes on Medication Errors"
    The Institute of Medicine noted that a hospital patient on average is subject to at least one medication error per day, making medication errors the most common cause of preventable adverse events. This interdisciplinary study, directed by Linda Flynn and Dong Suh from Rutgers University has been designed to disentangle the effects of nursing structures and care processes on non-intercepted medication errors in acute care hospitals. Click here to read a profile on Linda and her work.

  • "Nursing-Pharmacy Collaboration on Medication Reconciliation: A Novel Approach to Information Management"
    Deficits in communication across the continuum of care in regards to medication use can place patients at serious risk for harm. This interdisciplinary team, directed by Linda Costa and Bob Feroli at Johns Hopkins Hospital is examining how to economically support direct care providers in medication reconciliation in order to facilitate safe transition to and from hospital and community. The team has evaluated the effectiveness of a nurse-pharmacist clinical information coordination team in improving drug information management on admission and discharge, quantify potential harm due to reconciliation failures, and determine cost-benefit related to averted harm. Click here to read “Nurse-Led Interdisciplinary Teams: Challenges and Rewards,” a piece co-authored by Linda and Stephanie Poe which ran last fall in the Journal of Nursing Care Quality’s Focus on Patient Safety column.

  • "Empowering Home Care Nurses to Efficiently Resolve Medication Discrepancies"
    To contribute to a better understanding of the potential for home care nurses to lead in the identification and resolution of medication discrepancies during transitions between hospital and home care providers, this team at Washingon State University is conducting a clinical trial that investigates a new nurse-led, informatics-based intervention. They hypothesize that with this improvement in their environment, home care nurses already on staff can enhance patients' outcomes, reduce healthcare costs, and eliminate the need for duplicative services by external consultants or specialty providers. This team is co-led by Cynthia Corbett and Stephen Setter. Click here to read more about their project.

Recently, Drs. Flynn and Costa presented their work at the Funders Forum, co-sponsored by INQRI and the Donaghue Foundation. Click here to download their presentations.

For other programs from the IHI Open School, click here.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Creating Opportunities and Breaking Down Barriers to Adoption

On July 8 and 9, 2009, the Donaghue Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Intiative will host a health funders forum in Princeton, NJ. To promote this event, "Creating Opportunities and Breaking Down Barriers to Adoption," we have created a new blog: Bending the Curve.