The Minneapolis Center for Chronic Disease Outcomes Research (CCDOR) was established in 1998. Its mission is to enhance (through research, education, dissemination and implementation activities) the delivery and accessibility of high quality, cost-effective health care to optimize clinical, psychosocial, and functional outcomes for Veterans with chronic disease. Over the past several years, CCDOR has focused its research agenda on three chronic problems facing Veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan: Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury (TBI), and substance use disorders (including tobacco). The primary goal for our 2014-2018 COIN strategic plan, and the focus of our recently funded Collaborative Research to Enhance and Advance Transformation and Excellence program (CREATE), is to improve outcomes for Veterans with PTSD through enhanced delivery and uptake of evidence-based treatments. CCDOR's 2014-2018 strategic plan also includes two other areas of focused partnered research: The first is Cancer Prevention and Screening. CCDOR has been a VA research leader in the area of Cancer Prevention and Screening, with a focus on tobacco cessation, prostate cancer and colon cancer. Our plans for the next five years include developing and testing interventions to reduce the prevalence of tobacco use in Veterans and to optimize the appropriate use of screening for colon and prostate cancer (including decreasing rates of inappropriate screening). An emerging area of strength for CCDOR, and the focus of our third goal, is Management of Chronic Pain. In particular, CCDOR investigators are testing interventions to improve functional outcomes for Veterans with chronic pain, with an emphasis on reducing harms associated with opioid therapy and improving access to effective non-opioid pain therapies for Veterans. We expect this to be an area of continued growth during the 2014-2018 funding period. Finally, the strategic plan includes three additional goals: supporting high impact VA-centric outcomes research in other areas of expertise; increasing research capacity across VA; and maintaining an efficient infrastructure and supportive culture that will enable CCDOR to meet its research goals.

Public Health Relevance

The Minneapolis Center of Innovation (COIN) is a VA health services research center that includes 23 researchers (either MD or PhD) who design and conduct studies to improve health care services for Veterans. Our three major goals are to improve treatment engagement and outcomes for Veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD); optimize the provision of cancer prevention and screening services to improve outcomes for Veterans; and reduce harms and improve functional outcomes for Veterans with chronic pain. We train junior investigators to become VA health services researchers and collaborate with clinical and VHA operations partners to ensure that projects are relevant to VHA and that results will be translated into practice.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Veterans Affairs (VA)
Type
Veterans Administration (I50)
Project #
5I50HX001228-02
Application #
9076141
Study Section
HCN1 COIN REVIEW (HCN1)
Project Start
2013-10-01
Project End
2018-09-30
Budget Start
2014-10-01
Budget End
2015-09-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Minneapolis VA Medical Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
071774624
City
Minneapolis
State
MN
Country
United States
Zip Code
55417
Lillie, Sarah E; Fu, Steven S; Fabbrini, Angela E et al. (2018) Does need for cognitive closure explain individual differences in lung cancer screening? A brief report. J Health Psychol :1359105317750253
Japuntich, Sandra J; Sherman, Scott E; Joseph, Anne M et al. (2018) Proactive tobacco treatment for individuals with and without a mental health diagnosis: Secondary analysis of a pragmatic randomized controlled trial. Addict Behav 76:15-19