This application requests renewal of funding for five years to support our postdoctoral training program in critical care health policy research (CCHPR). The overall goal of this program is to develop skilled investigators trained to conduct health services research and capable of academic careers as independent researchers improving the quality and safety of critical care medicine. All trainees enroll in the Masters of Science in Health Policy Research (MSHP) degree program-offered by Penn's School of Medicine and its Wharton School. The program has been highly successful attracting, training, and graduating trainees in its first few cohorts. Trainees receive an intensive, structured program of mentoring, didactic research training, and experiential research over two years. The program includes core courses in health economics, health policy, qualitative/quantitative measurement, and statistics; elective courses in advanced epidemiology or biostatistics, advanced health care economics, health care policy, statistics, survey design and measurement, and social policy and demography; intensive mentoring in critical care health services research by experts in the field; participation in multidisciplinary research and professional development seminars; instruction in the responsible conduct of research and regulatory affairs; and the development and completion of a clinical research project in critical care medicine under close supervision of a multidisciplinary mentoring team. The program is designed for postdoctoral physician fellows with clinical experience in adult and pediatric critica care. The definition of critical care encompasses care for adults and children with severe acute medical problems, trauma and post-surgical care in intensive care units, coronary care units or emergency departments. The program emphasizes research on policy- relevant issues in critical care outcomes, financing, delivery, and management, often in contexts that are collaborative and interdisciplinary. Program participants will gain the skills necessary to combine their clinica expertise with their research training in order to ask and answer important questions about how critical care is and ought to be organized, financed, managed, and delivered.

Public Health Relevance

The morbidity, mortality and costs attributable to critical illness are enormous. This postdoctoral program integrates clinical experience, health services research training, and policy analysis for physicians trained in critical care medicine. These trainees form a cadre of physician leaders capable of addressing critical care issues at the bedside, across populations, and alongside policymakers.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
5T32HL098054-10
Application #
9691934
Study Section
NHLBI Institutional Training Mechanism Review Committee (NITM)
Program Officer
Redmond, Nicole
Project Start
2010-07-01
Project End
2020-04-30
Budget Start
2019-05-01
Budget End
2020-04-30
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pennsylvania
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
042250712
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19104
Krutsinger, Dustin C; Halpern, Scott D; DeMartino, Erin S (2018) Conflicts of interest in intensive care medicine. Intensive Care Med 44:1765-1766
Anesi, George L; Gabler, Nicole B; Allorto, Nikki L et al. (2018) Intensive Care Unit Capacity Strain and Outcomes of Critical Illness in a Resource-Limited Setting: A 2-Hospital Study in South Africa. J Intensive Care Med :885066618815804
Coupet Jr, Edouard; Karp, David; Wiebe, Douglas J et al. (2018) Shift in U.S. payer responsibility for the acute care of violent injuries after the Affordable Care Act: Implications for prevention. Am J Emerg Med 36:2192-2196
Halpern, Scott D (2018) Using Default Options and Other Nudges to Improve Critical Care. Crit Care Med 46:460-464
Kohn, Rachel; Harhay, Michael O; Bayes, Brian et al. (2018) Ward Capacity Strain: A Novel Predictor of 30-Day Hospital Readmissions. J Gen Intern Med 33:1851-1853
Josephs, Michael; Bayard, Dominique; Gabler, Nicole B et al. (2018) Active Choice Intervention Increases Advance Directive Completion: A Randomized Trial. MDM Policy Pract 3:2381468317753127
Weissman, Gary E; Yadav, Kuldeep N; Madden, Vanessa et al. (2018) Numeracy and Understanding of Quantitative Aspects of Predictive Models: A Pilot Study. Appl Clin Inform 9:683-692
DuGoff, Eva H; Fernandes-Taylor, Sara; Weissman, Gary E et al. (2018) A scoping review of patient-sharing network studies using administrative data. Transl Behav Med 8:598-625
Weissman, Gary E; Harhay, Michael (2018) Incomplete Comparisons Between the Predictive Power of Data From Administrative Claims and Electronic Health Records. Med Care 56:202
Krutsinger, Dustin C; McMahon, Jacqueline; Stephens-Shields, Alisa J et al. (2018) Randomized evaluation of trial acceptability by INcentive (RETAIN): Study protocol for two embedded randomized controlled trials. Contemp Clin Trials 76:1-8

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