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Showing papers by "Atul A. Gawande published in 2017"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of the highest quality research over the past decade examining the effects of health insurance on health concludes that insurance coverage increases access to care and improves health outcomes.
Abstract: The authors report their analysis of the highest quality research over the past decade examining the effects of health insurance on health and conclude that insurance coverage increases access to care and improves health outcomes.

305 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Birth attendants' adherence to essential birth practices was higher in facilities that used the coaching‐based WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist program than in those that did not, but maternal and perinatal mortality and maternal morbidity did not differ significantly between the two groups.
Abstract: BackgroundThe prevalence of facility-based childbirth in low-resource settings has increased dramatically during the past two decades, yet gaps in the quality of care persist and mortality remains high. The World Health Organization (WHO) Safe Childbirth Checklist, a quality-improvement tool, promotes systematic adherence to practices that have been associated with improved childbirth outcomes. MethodsWe conducted a matched-pair, cluster-randomized, controlled trial in 60 pairs of facilities across 24 districts of Uttar Pradesh, India, testing the effect of the BetterBirth program, an 8-month coaching-based implementation of the Safe Childbirth Checklist, on a composite outcome of perinatal death, maternal death, or maternal severe complications within 7 days after delivery. Outcomes — assessed 8 to 42 days after delivery — were compared between the intervention group and the control group with adjustment for clustering and matching. We also compared birth attendants’ adherence to 18 essential birth pract...

163 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Dean T. Jamison1, Ala Alwan2, Charles Mock2, Rachel Nugent3, David A Watkins2, Olusoji Adeyi4, Shuchi Anand5, Rifat Atun6, Stefano M. Bertozzi7, Zulfiqar A Bhutta8, Agnes Binagwaho6, Robert E. Black9, Mark blecher, Barry R. Bloom6, Elizabeth Brouwer2, Donald A. P. Bundy10, Dan Chisholm11, Alarcos Cieza11, Mark R. Cullen5, Kristen Danforth2, Nilanthi de Silva12, Haile T. Debas1, Peter Donkor13, Tarun Dua11, Kenneth A. Fleming14, Mark Gallivan, Patricia J. Garcia15, Atul A. Gawande6, Atul A. Gawande16, Thomas A. Gaziano6, Thomas A. Gaziano16, Hellen Gelband17, Roger I. Glass18, Amanda Glassman19, Glenda Gray20, Demissie Habte, King K. Holmes2, Susan Horton21, Guy Hutton22, Prabhat Jha17, Felicia Marie Knaul23, Olive Kobusingye24, Eric L. Krakauer6, Margaret E Kruk6, Peter J. Lachmann25, Ramanan Laxminarayan26, Carol Levin2, Lai-Meng Looi27, Nita Madhav, Adel A. F. Mahmoud28, Jean Claude Mbanya, Anthony Measham4, María Elena Medina-Mora, Carol Medlin29, Anne Mills30, Jody Anne Mills11, Jaime Montoya31, Ole Frithjof Norheim32, Zachary Olson7, Folashade O. Omokhodion33, Ben Oppenheim, Toby Ord14, Vikram Patel6, George C Patton34, John W. Peabody1, Dorairaj Prabhakaran35, Dorairaj Prabhakaran30, Jinyuan Qi28, Teri A. Reynolds11, Sevket Ruacan36, Rengaswamy Sankaranarayanan37, Jaime Sepúlveda1, Richard Skolnik38, Kirk R. Smith7, Marleen Temmerman8, Stephen Tollman20, Stéphane Verguet6, Damian G. Walker10, Neff Walker9, Yangfeng Wu39, Kun Zhao 
TL;DR: DCP3 is particularly relevant as achievement of EUHC relies increasingly on greater domestic finance, with global developmental assistance in health focusing more on global public goods.

148 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Patients in the clinics with the Serious Illness Care Program implemented were more likely than those in comparison clinics to have serious illness conversations-including discussion of values and goals-documented in patients' medical records.
Abstract: Improving communication about goals and values for patients with advancing serious illness nearing the end of life is a key opportunity to improve the value of care. The Serious Illness Care Program, implemented at primary care clinics affiliated with Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, is a multicomponent intervention designed to support best practices in communication by clinicians to increase conversations with patients with serious illness about their goals and values. We conducted a study of the program in fourteen primary care clinics participating in a high-risk care management program based in an accountable care organization. Patients in the clinics with the program implemented were more likely than those in comparison clinics to have serious illness conversations—including discussion of values and goals—documented in patients’ medical records. Clinicians who participated also reported high satisfaction with training they received as part of the program, which they regarded as ...

118 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Video-based coaching is a novel and feasible modality for supplementing intraoperative learning and demonstrates that it may be particularly useful for teaching higher-level concepts, such as decision making, and for individualizing instruction and feedback to each resident.
Abstract: Importance Surgical expertise demands technical and nontechnical skills. Traditionally, surgical trainees acquired these skills in the operating room; however, operative time for residents has decreased with duty hour restrictions. As in other professions, video analysis may help maximize the learning experience. Objective To develop and evaluate a postoperative video-based coaching intervention for residents. Design, Setting, and Participants In this mixed methods analysis, 10 senior (postgraduate year 4 and 5) residents were videorecorded operating with an attending surgeon at an academic tertiary care hospital. Each video formed the basis of a 1-hour one-on-one coaching session conducted by the operative attending; although a coaching framework was provided, participants determined the specific content collaboratively. Teaching points were identified in the operating room and the video-based coaching sessions; iterative inductive coding, followed by thematic analysis, was performed. Main Outcomes and Measures Teaching points made in the operating room were compared with those in the video-based coaching sessions with respect to initiator, content, and teaching technique, adjusting for time. Results Among 10 cases, surgeons made more teaching points per unit time (63.0 vs 102.7 per hour) while coaching. Teaching in the video-based coaching sessions was more resident centered; attendings were more inquisitive about residents’ learning needs (3.30 vs 0.28,P = .04), and residents took more initiative to direct their education (27% [198 of 729 teaching points] vs 17% [331 of 1977 teaching points],P Conclusions and Relevance Video-based coaching is a novel and feasible modality for supplementing intraoperative learning. Objective evaluation demonstrates that video-based coaching may be particularly useful for teaching higher-level concepts, such as decision making, and for individualizing instruction and feedback to each resident.

99 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Despite similar pre-existing rates and trends of postoperative mortality, hospitals in South Carolina completing a voluntary checklist-based surgical quality improvement program had a reduction in deaths after inpatient surgery over the first 3 years of the collaborative compared with other hospitals in the state.
Abstract: Objective:To determine whether completion of a voluntary, checklist-based surgical quality improvement program is associated with reduced 30-day postoperative mortality.Background:Despite evidence of efficacy of team-based surgical safety checklists in improving perioperative outcomes in research tr

86 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Proactive management of unit culture and nursing was associated with a significantly higher risk of primary cesarean delivery in low-risk patients and other proactive management practices may be associated with decreased risk of prolonged length of stay, indicating a potential opportunity to safely improve labor and delivery unit efficiency.

51 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Implementation of the WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist with peer coaching resulted in >90% adherence to 35 of 39 essential birth practices among birth attendants after 8 months, but adherence to some practices was lower when the coach was absent than when a coach was present.
Abstract: Background Adherence to evidence-based essential birth practices is critical for improving health outcomes for mothers and newborns. The WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist (SCC) incorporates these practices, which occur during 4 critical pause points: on admission, before pushing (or cesarean delivery), soon after birth, and before discharge. A peer-coaching strategy to support consistent use of the SCC may be an effective approach to increase birth attendants' adherence to these practices. Methods We assessed data from 60 public health facilities in Uttar Pradesh, India, that received an 8-month staggered coaching intervention from December 2014 to September 2016 as part of the BetterBirth Trial, which is studying effectiveness of an SCC-centered intervention on maternal and neonatal harm. Nurse coaches recorded birth attendants' adherence to 39 essential birth practices. Practice adherence was calculated for each intervention month. After 2 months of coaching, a subsample of 15 facilities was selected for independent observation when the coach was not present. We compared adherence to the 18 practices recorded by both coaches and independent observers. Results Coaches observed birth attendants' behavior during 5,971 deliveries. By the final month of the intervention, 35 of 39 essential birth practices had achieved >90% adherence in the presence of a coach, compared with only 7 of 39 practices during the first month. Key behaviors with the greatest improvement included explanation of danger signs, temperature measurement, assessment of fetal heart sounds, initiation of skin-to-skin contact, and breastfeeding. Without a coach present, birth attendants' average adherence to practices and checklist use was 24 percentage points lower than when a coach was present (range: -1% to 62%). Conclusion Implementation of the WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist with coaching improved uptake of and adherence to essential birth practices. Coordination and communication among facility staff, as well as behaviors with an immediate, tangible benefit, showed the greatest improvement. Difficult-to-perform behaviors and those with delayed or theoretical benefits were less likely to be sustained without a coach present. Coaching may be an important component in implementing the Safe Childbirth Checklist at scale.Note: At the time of publication of this article, the results of evaluation of the impact of the BetterBirth intervention were pending publication in another journal. After the impact findings have been published, we will update this article on the effect of the intervention on birth practices with a reference to the impact findings.

43 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2017-Surgery
TL;DR: There is wide cost variation for common operative procedures in the United States, and high‐cost hospitals may need to focus on cost reduction at the hospital level to reduce cost across service lines.

35 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: As growth >2 mm/y predicts malignant compared with benign disease, this clinical parameter can contribute to the assessment of thyroid cancer risk.
Abstract: Context Thyroid nodule growth was once considered concerning for malignancy, but data showing that benign nodules grow questioned the use of this paradigm. To date, however, no studies have adequately evaluated whether growth rates differ in malignant vs. benign nodules. Objective To sonographically evaluate growth rates in benign and malignant thyroid nodules ≥1 cm. Design Prospective, cohort study of patients with tissue diagnosis of benign or malignant disease, with repeated ultrasound evaluation six or more months apart. Main outcomes Growth rate in largest dimension of malignant compared with benign thyroid nodules. Regression models were used to evaluate predictors of growth. Results Malignant nodules (126) met inclusion criteria (≥6-month nonoperative followup) and were compared with 1363 benign nodules. Malignant nodules were not found to be uniquely selected or prospectively observed solely for low-risk phenotype. Median ultrasound intervals were similar (21.8 months for benign nodules; 20.9 months for malignant nodules). Malignant nodules were more likely to grow >2 mm/y compared with benign nodules [relative risk (RR) = 2.5, 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.6 to 3.1; P 2 mm/y had greater odds of being more aggressive cancers [intermediate risk: odds ratio (OR) = 2.99; 95% CI, 1.20 to 7.47; P = 0.03; higher risk: OR = 8.69; 95% CI, 1.78 to 42.34; P = 0.02]. Conclusions Malignant nodules, especially higher-risk phenotypes, grow faster than benign nodules. As growth >2 mm/y predicts malignant compared with benign disease, this clinical parameter can contribute to the assessment of thyroid cancer risk.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This case study provides a detailed description of Costa Rica's innovative implementation of four critical service delivery reforms and explains how those reforms supported the provision of the four essential functions of primary health care: first-contact access, coordination, continuity, and comprehensiveness.
Abstract: Long considered a paragon among low- and middle-income countries in its provision of primary health care, Costa Rica reformed its primary health care system in 1994 using a model that, despite its ...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The BetterBirth Program relied on carefully structured coaching that was multilevel, collaborative, and provider-centered to motivate birth attendants to use the WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist and improve adherence to essential birth practices, and was scaled to 60 sites as part of a randomized controlled trial.
Abstract: Shifting childbirth into facilities has not improved health outcomes for mothers and newborns as significantly as hoped. Improving the quality and safety of care provided during facility-based childbirth requires helping providers to adhere to essential birth practices—evidence-based behaviors that reduce harm to and save lives of mothers and newborns. To achieve this goal, we developed the BetterBirth Program, which we tested in a matched-pair, cluster-randomized controlled trial in Uttar Pradesh, India. The goal of this intervention was to improve adoption and sustained use of the World Health Organization Safe Childbirth Checklist (SCC), an organized collection of 28 essential birth practices that are known to improve the quality of facility-based childbirth care. Here, we describe the BetterBirth Program in detail, including its 4 main features: implementation tools, an implementation strategy of coaching, an implementation pathway (Engage-Launch-Support), and a sustainability plan. This coaching-based implementation of the SCC motivates and empowers care providers to identify, understand, and resolve the barriers they face in using the SCC with the resources already available. We describe important lessons learned from our experience with the BetterBirth Program as it was tested in the BetterBirth Trial. For example, the emphasis on relationship building and respect led to trust between coaches and birth attendants and helped influence change. In addition, the cloud-based data collection and feedback system proved a valuable asset in the coaching process. More research on coaching-based interventions is required to refine our understanding of what works best to improve quality and safety of care in various settings. (After publication of this article, the impact results of the BetterBirth intervention were published in the New England Journal of Medicine [volume 377, pages 2313-2324, doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1701075]. The results showed that the intervention had no significant effect on maternal or perinatal mortality or maternal morbidity, despite having positive effects on essential birth practices.)

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Perception of OR safety of surgical practice was associated with hospital-level 30-day postoperative death rates, and most findings seen among all OR personnel were seen among nurses, they were often absent among surgeons.
Abstract: Objective To evaluate whether the perception of safety of surgical practice among operating room (OR) personnel is associated with hospital-level 30-day postoperative death. Background The relationship between improvements in the safety of surgical practice and benefits to postoperative outcomes has not been demonstrated empirically. Methods As part of the Safe Surgery 2015: South Carolina initiative, a baseline survey measuring the perception of safety of surgical practice among OR personnel was completed. We evaluated the relationship between hospital-level mean item survey scores and rates of all-cause 30-day postoperative death using binomial regression. Models were controlled for multiple patient, hospital, and procedure covariates using supervised principal components regression. Results The overall survey response rate was 38.1% (1793/4707) among 31 hospitals. For every 1 point increase in the hospital-level mean score for respect [adjusted relative risk (aRR) 0.78, 95% CI 0.65-0.93, P = 0.0059], clinical leadership (aRR 0.86, 95% CI 0.74-0.9932, P = 0.0401), and assertiveness (aRR 0.71, 95% CI 0.54-0.93, P = 0.01) among all survey respondents, there were associated decreases in the hospital-level 30-day postoperative death rate after inpatient surgery ranging from 14% to 29%. Higher hospital-level mean scores for the statement, "I would feel safe being treated here as a patient," were associated with significantly lower hospital-level 30-day postoperative death rates (aRR 0.83, 95% CI 0.70-0.97, P = 0.02). Although most findings seen among all OR personnel were seen among nurses, they were often absent among surgeons. Conclusions Perception of OR safety of surgical practice was associated with hospital-level 30-day postoperative death rates.

Journal ArticleDOI
07 Sep 2017-Trials
TL;DR: An integrated DQA system, combining auditing, rapid data feedback, and supportive supervision, which ensured high-quality data and could serve as a model for future health systems research trials is developed.
Abstract: There are few published standards or methodological guidelines for integrating Data Quality Assurance (DQA) protocols into large-scale health systems research trials, especially in resource-limited settings. The BetterBirth Trial is a matched-pair, cluster-randomized controlled trial (RCT) of the BetterBirth Program, which seeks to improve quality of facility-based deliveries and reduce 7-day maternal and neonatal mortality and maternal morbidity in Uttar Pradesh, India. In the trial, over 6300 deliveries were observed and over 153,000 mother-baby pairs across 120 study sites were followed to assess health outcomes. We designed and implemented a robust and integrated DQA system to sustain high-quality data throughout the trial. We designed the Data Quality Monitoring and Improvement System (DQMIS) to reinforce six dimensions of data quality: accuracy, reliability, timeliness, completeness, precision, and integrity. The DQMIS was comprised of five functional components: 1) a monitoring and evaluation team to support the system; 2) a DQA protocol, including data collection audits and targets, rapid data feedback, and supportive supervision; 3) training; 4) standard operating procedures for data collection; and 5) an electronic data collection and reporting system. Routine audits by supervisors included double data entry, simultaneous delivery observations, and review of recorded calls to patients. Data feedback reports identified errors automatically, facilitating supportive supervision through a continuous quality improvement model. The five functional components of the DQMIS successfully reinforced data reliability, timeliness, completeness, precision, and integrity. The DQMIS also resulted in 98.33% accuracy across all data collection activities in the trial. All data collection activities demonstrated improvement in accuracy throughout implementation. Data collectors demonstrated a statistically significant (p = 0.0004) increase in accuracy throughout consecutive audits. The DQMIS was successful, despite an increase from 20 to 130 data collectors. In the absence of widely disseminated data quality methods and standards for large RCT interventions in limited-resource settings, we developed an integrated DQA system, combining auditing, rapid data feedback, and supportive supervision, which ensured high-quality data and could serve as a model for future health systems research trials. Future efforts should focus on standardization of DQA processes for health systems research. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier, NCT02148952 . Registered on 13 February 2014.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Bilateral disease is common in f PvPTC, primarily in the form of papillary microcarcinomas, and future monitoring of the contralateral lobe should be discussed with fvPTC patients who do not undergo completion thyroidectomy.
Abstract: Background Thyroid lobectomy alone is being performed increasingly for patients with encapsulated follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma (fvPTC). However, the prevalence of contralateral disease in these patients is unknown. We investigated the presence of synchronous disease in fvPTC to improve decision making about the extent of surgical resection and need for surveillance. Study Design We performed a retrospective review of patients who underwent thyroid surgery from October 2009 to February 2013 with a diagnosis of fvPTC as their primary lesion. We collected information on patient demographics, nodule size, multifocality, fine-needle aspiration results, lymphovascular invasion, extrathyroidal extension, and lymph node metastasis. Tumors were divided into noninvasive and invasive/infiltrative fvPTC categories. Characteristics of solitary and bilateral fvPTC were compared. Results We identified 124 patients with final pathology demonstrating fvPTC. The most common fine-needle aspiration diagnosis was "suspicious for malignancy" (n = 53). Sixty-five contralateral tumors were identified in 44 of 124 patients (35.5%) and included fvPTC (n = 40), classical PTC (n = 22), tall cell PTC (n = 2), and follicular carcinoma (n = 1). Fifty contralateral tumors were 1 to 5 mm, 10 measured 6 to 9 mm, and 5 were ≥10 mm. Contralateral disease correlated significantly with lymphovascular invasion (p = 0.037) and larger primary lesions (p = 0.020). There was no significant difference noted in extrathyroidal extension or lymph node metastasis. Both noninvasive and invasive/infiltrative fvPTC demonstrated similar rates of contralateral disease. Conclusions Bilateral disease is common in fvPTC, primarily in the form of papillary microcarcinomas. Future monitoring of the contralateral lobe should be discussed with fvPTC patients who do not undergo completion thyroidectomy.