PCR031: Getting Test Results and Clinical Guidance to the Front Lines of Primary Care in Alberta: A qualitative study (Pearls)

Fariba Aghajafari, MD, PhD, MSc; Kerry McBrien, MD, MPH; Caroline Claussen, PhD; Rida Abboud; Alyssa Ness, MD, BN; Myles Leslie, PhD

Abstract

Context: As with elsewhere in the world, the majority of COVID-19 patients in Canada’s first waves of the pandemic did not require acute care. The Calgary health zone, in the Canadian province of Alberta, sought ways to effectively manage these patients in community-based primary care. The COVID-19 Integrated Pathway (CIP) is an intervention developed in the Calgary health zone to facilitate the flow of data about, and provision of primary care to, these patients. The CIP – which remained in use during the 2021 third wave – is comprised of two inter-related components: 1) a data pathway that disseminates patient COVID-19 lab test results from the province’s public health system to local primary care organizations; and 2) a clinical pathway or algorithm that offers guidance for patient care. Objective: To facilitate improved implementation and potential scaling of the CIP, this study sought to understand the contextual factors that shaped the creation, and use, of the CIP’s data and clinical pathways. Study Design: Inductive, open-focused interviews with key informants elicited the contextual factors shaping the creation, uptake, use, and effectiveness of the CIP. . Setting or Dataset: Key informants (n=57) from Calgary health zone public health, and primary care facilities, as well as patients who had transited the CIP (n=5).Population studied: Leaders, administrators, clinicians, and patients who were familiar with the CIP from: Alberta Health Services’ (AHS) Public Health and Primary Care facilities, as well as non-AHS Primary Care Networks (PCN).. Outcome Measures: Contextual factors shaped the creation and implementation of the CIP Results: A range of contextual pre-conditions facilitated the rapid development of the CIP’s components in the Calgary health zone, as well as their uptake and evolution. These included: a history of collaboration and coordination across the Calgary health zone; existing organizational structures between AHS and Calgary’s 7 PCNs; champions within multiple systems of the health sector; and existing expertise and leadership in developing and using clinical algorithms for the provision of primary care. Conclusions: The CIP’s data and clinical pathways helped deliver clear, consistent, and timely care to COVID-19 patients in the Calgary health zone. While there may be some challenges to scaling the intervention, sustaining the CIP will create a more robust pandemic response in the future.
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Jack Westfall
jwestfall@aafp.org 11/20/2021

Great poster and abstract. what comes next from this study? hoping this continues as the pandemic is still not over. nice work. thanks

Fariba Aghajafri
fariba.aghajajfari@ucalgary.ca 11/22/2021

Thanks for your comments. Yes, the CIP was used during waves 3rd and 4th and is being adopted more by a few PCNs in Edmonton Area.

Gillian Bartlett
gillian.bartlett@health.missouri.edu 11/22/2021

This is a great project - I really hope you can scale it up - do you think it would work in other provinces/systems?

Fariba Aghajafari
fariba.aghajafari@ucalgary.ca 11/23/2021

Thanks for your comment. As our qualitative inquiry showed, there is a need of pre-existing relationship between public health and primary care and health authorities for integration. It is possible but depends on the local relationship.

Andy Pasternak
avpiv711@sbcglobal.net 11/26/2021

Great work demonstrating how primary care can quickly change to the needs of a comunity

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