Skip to main content
  • Study protocol
  • Open access
  • Published:

Linking clinician interaction and coordination to clinical performance in Patient-Aligned Care Teams

Abstract

Background

Team coordination within clinical care settings is a critical component of effective patient care. Less is known about the extent, effectiveness, and impact of coordination activities among professionals within VA Patient-Aligned Care Teams (PACTs). This study will address these gaps by describing the specific, fundamental tasks and practices involved in PACT coordination, their impact on performance measures, and the role of coordination task complexity.

Methods/design

First, we will use a web-based survey of coordination practices among 1600 PACTs in the national VHA. Survey findings will characterize PACT coordination practices and assess their association with clinical performance measures. Functional job analysis, using 6–8 subject matter experts who are 3rd and 4th year residents in VA Primary Care rotations, will be utilized to identify the tasks involved in completing clinical performance measures to standard. From this, expert ratings of coordination complexity will be used to determine the level of coordinative complexity required for each of the clinical performance measures drawn from the VA External Peer Review Program (EPRP). For objective 3, data collected from the first two methods will evaluate the effect of clinical complexity on the relationships between measures of PACT coordination and their ratings on the clinical performance measures.

Discussion

Results from this study will support successful implementation of coordinated team-based work in clinical settings by providing knowledge regarding which aspects of care require the most complex levels of coordination and how specific coordination practices impact clinical performance.

Background

Organizing patient care and enhancing coordination are essential components to improving quality healthcare delivery [13]. Many healthcare facilities are transitioning to team-based healthcare where coordination among interdisciplinary team members must occur for successful patient care [46]. The VA recently implemented Patient-Aligned Care Teams (PACTs), a team-based adaptation of the patient-centered medical home that has a recommended team configuration consisting of a physician (primary care provider, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant), care manager, clinical associate, and clerical associate [7]. Successful implementation of this new model requires integration of coordination practices into daily clinical and organizational processes and training.

One of the defining characteristics of teams is their task interdependence. As a result, coordination is a critical feature of effective teamwork [6, 8] and is a major challenge in the implementation of care teams [9]. Within healthcare, coordination consists of team members working collectively on interdependent tasks and coordination-intensive procedures that require effective communication and task sequencing for these procedures to be completed without errors or delays in care. Figure 1, for example, illustrates the coordinative activities required in tobacco screening and smoking cessation programs

Fig. 1
figure 1

Example process flow of a tobacco cessation screening and therapy coordinative activity performed by outpatient PACTs

Breakdowns in coordination can give rise to errors that can affect quality, safety, and patient satisfaction [10]. For example, a breakdown in coordination could occur in the activities described in Fig. 1 if it was not clear who was responsible for the discussion of patient preferences. Unfortunately, in some contexts, the implementation of care teams has been associated with clinician overload, role conflict, and decreased job satisfaction due to poor coordination processes [9, 11]. Currently, there is a gap in the literature identifying coordination best practices for healthcare teams. The present study addresses this gap directly, and both describes and measures the enabling factors and influences for coordination as well as the relationship between these enabling factors and effective performance.

Theoretical foundation

Although many advocate the need for care coordination [2, 1215], there is little healthcare research examining the evidence-based practices for how successful coordination occurs. To address this gap, we draw on Okhuysen and Bechky’s theoretical model of coordination [8] to facilitate the study objectives of characterizing coordination practices and assessing the association of these coordination practices with clinical performance. This coordination model has been successfully used within healthcare settings [10] and provides an overall framework for detailing the mechanisms and processes and integrating conditions that enable teams to work collectively.

According to this framework, five basic mechanisms underlie effective coordination: plans and rules, objects and representations, roles, routines, and proximity. These five basic mechanisms enable teams to achieve three integrating conditions: (1) accountability (knowing who is responsible for what), (2) predictability (knowing what tasks are involved and when they happen), and (3) common understanding (providing a shared perspective on the whole process and how individuals’ work fits within the whole). It is these three conditions that allow people to collectively accomplish their interdependent tasks [8]. In tobacco screening and therapy, for example (see Fig. 1), effective patient care can only occur if the nurse, physician, and clerk know who is responsible for which task, the sequencing of the tasks, and how each person’s tasks fit within the larger goal of providing smoking cessation guidance.

Coordination complexity

As different clinical outcomes require a varying number of tasks, and said tasks require different levels of knowledge, skills, and abilities, we expect to find significant variability in the coordinative complexity (i.e., the complexity of interaction needed among personnel to complete the task) required to perform clinical tasks. Within healthcare, coordinative complexity is associated with changes in clinical performance because the higher the task complexity, the more effort or time needed to successfully perform the task [1618]. Team coordination, therefore, is likely more important for patient care within highly complex situations.

Healthcare quality is likely influenced by the interaction of coordination practices and coordination complexity. For example, the smoking cessation screening process described in Fig. 1 involves 8 steps and 3 clinic personnel whereas a similar screening process for colorectal cancer involves up to 25 steps and 8 personnel [17, 18]. Clinical performance measures, however, often do not take coordinative complexity into account. To best promote successful team implementation, it is necessary to understand the relationship between coordination and performance and evaluate the extent to which the association between these practices and performance varies by the degree of coordinative complexity required for clinical performance outcomes.

Objectives and hypotheses

We plan to characterize, measure, and evaluate coordination, examine its relationship with clinical performance, and assess the role of coordinative complexity on these relationships. Our study has three objectives and associated hypotheses:

  • Objective 1: Characterize coordination practices, and elements of coordination utilized by PACTs (objective 1a) and assess the association between coordination practices utilized by PACTs and clinical performance (objective 1b). We hypothesize that PACTs with a greater number of effective coordination practices (e.g., clear roles, explicit plans, and rules) will have higher levels of clinical performance.

  • Objective 2: Determine the level of coordinative complexity required for specific outpatient clinical performance measures. We predict the coordinative complexity required to perform tasks in specific clinical performance measure will vary significantly across measures.

  • Objective 3: Evaluate the extent to which the association between coordination and clinical performance varies by the degree of coordinative complexity required to meet each performance measure. We hypothesize that the association between coordination practices and clinical performance will be stronger for clinical performance measures exhibiting higher levels of coordinative complexity.

Methods/design

Table 1 presents an overview of the methods—a combination of survey methods, focus groups, and analysis of existing data—employed in this study. Methods for each objective are detailed below, followed by a data analysis plan for the entire project.

Table 1 Overview of study methods, by objective

Objective 1

Design

We will develop, evaluate, and deploy a web-based survey instrument, titled Coordination Practices Survey, to a sample of 1600 PACTs randomly selected from VA Medical Centers (VAMC) nationwide. Survey responses will then be combined with PACT-level clinical performance data from existing VA databases to test study hypotheses.

Participants

Participants will consist of members from 1600 PACT teams, selected randomly from approximately 5700 Primary Care PACTs nationwide at all available VAMC (nvamc = 150). A PACT teamlet consists of four members: physician (primary care provider, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant), care manager, clinical associate, and clerical associate [7]. To calculate interrater agreement, a minimum of two respondents per team are needed. In previous work with a national sample of primary care providers, we obtained response rates of 50–60 % [19]. To account for these expected response rates as well as exclusion of PACTs due to incomplete data, we will invite 1600 PACTs to participate.

Measures and data sources

Outcome measure: clinical performance

Clinical performance will be measured using 5 composite outpatient measures (comprised of a total of 25 component measures) from VA’s External Peer Review Program (EPRP), a nationally abstracted database containing performance data for all VA medical facilities on over 90 indicators assessing access, quality of care, cost-effectiveness, and patient satisfaction [20]. Performance measures were selected if they were active, outpatient EPRP measures with data available at the provider level. In cases where one measure is a subset of the other, we only included the parent measure. Table 2 displays the specific outcome measures we propose to study. These measures reflect the collective efforts of the PACTs in providing high-quality care. To accomplish these tasks to standard, all PACT members will be involved to some extent. To obtain a stable estimate of performance, we will collect EPRP data for all facilities for a period from 6 months before deployment of our survey to 6 months after the close of survey.

Table 2 Clinical performance measures to be used

Independent variables: coordination practices

Coordination will be measured via the Coordination Practices Survey, an online survey created specifically for this study (see the “Procedure” section).

Covariate: PACT integration

Although PACTs were implemented nationwide, facilities had some discretion in their implementation; therefore, the degree to which facilities have fully implemented PACTs will likely vary. To account for this potential confounding effect of PACT implementation, we will use a score that describes the level of integration to risk adjust for PACT integration variability. We define this construct as the degree to which facilities and their PACT teams have put in place features—such as same-day access, telephone utilization, 2-day post-discharge contact, and patient continuity with provider—conducive to the team-based model of care. To measure PACT integration, we will calculate a score for each PACT using the PACT Recognition methodology employed by VA’s Office of Primary Care Operations [21], which uses PACT recognition metrics maintained by the Office of Primary Care Operations (OPCO), and available on the PACT Compass Cube hosted by the VHA Support Service Center (VSSC).

The PACT Compass Cube provides a series of metrics that reflects the dimensions and principles of the PACT to indicate whether a facility is on the right path in integrating PACT teams. The metrics in the compass—e.g., non-traditional care modalities, access metrics, continuity metrics, and coordination of care metrics—are based on patients assigned in the Primary Care Management Module (PCMM) to a team and primary care provider. The computations for the PACT integration and the individual recognition metrics we will employ have been used nationally by the VA and are recognized by the VA leadership.

Participant characteristics and contact information

After completing all necessary VA Data User Agreements, we will request and merge two datasets, VA’s PCMM and the Personnel Accounting Integrated Database (PAID), to help us identify potential survey participants. The PCMM report displays, by facility, primary care staff members and team positions assigned to all active PACTs. We will use the Full Time Equivalent (FTE) field in the database to determine PACT eligibility: team providers are required to have a FTE of ≥0.80 to be included in the participant sample pool. PAID, the VA’s national employee database, will provide information on employment site, job title, length of employment, PACT assignment date, and contact information including PACT members’ email addresses.

Procedure

Coordination practices survey development and validation

To develop scales to measure coordination, we will follow DeVellis’ recommendations for scale development [22], considered by survey developers as highly rigorous. The following steps will be used:

  1. 1.

    Construct clear, operationalizable definitions of our constructs. To prepare for this, we have crafted preliminary, context-free definitions based on our conceptual model of coordination. These operationalizations will be tailored to the PACT setting with the aid of PACT providers and research collaborators experienced in coordination and team research.

  2. 2.

    Develop an item pool that maps onto each construct. Based on the operational definitions defined in step 1, we will search the literature for appropriate scales and items and construct new items where gaps are present. We will tailor our preliminary items to the PACT setting and create new items to achieve a goal of 4–7 items per construct. Response choice format will be Likert scaled (i.e., ranging from strongly disagree to strongly agree, using a five-point scale).

  3. 3.

    Test survey for usability and clarity. The items will then be tested with an independent set of 6–8 local VA PACT member participants who will provide suggestions regarding item modifications. Starting with the first participant, each will complete a talk-aloud procedure while completing the survey, describing their reactions and questions to each item. The survey will then be refined based on the participant’s comments, and a new version will be presented to the next participant. In finalizing the survey instrument, we will ascertain that survey completion duration will not exceed 15 min and that all relevant constructs are measured with at least four items per construct.

  4. 4.

    Test the factor structure and reliability of the O&B model. We will invite 500 PACTs to complete the survey as a validation sample and conduct psychometric analyses (see the Data analysis plan (all aims) section) to evaluate the reliability [23] and factor structure of the instrument. Recruitment procedures for the validation sample will mirror those of the main study sample.

Contacting eligible participants

Adapting Dillman’s recommendations [24] to recruit participants and deploy the survey, we will (a) contact, via email, the Facility Medical Directors and Associates Chief of Staff of Research at each facility to notify them of the survey effort; (b) contact the 1600 PACT teamlets via email 2 weeks prior to survey deployment and inform them of the proposed research study; and (c) send formal survey invitations to the 1600 PACTs. Actual survey invitations will be deployed via email and will contain an individualized hyperlink to the survey.

Deploy online survey

The online survey will be created and deployed using REDCap, a VA approved online survey platform managed by the Vanderbilt University Office of Research and hosted locally by the VA Information Resource Center (VIReC) [25]. To ensure data security, the VA’s implementation of this platform functions behind the VA firewall and restricts access to only VA employees. We will send follow-up emails to non-responders 2 and 3 weeks after the initial survey invitations are sent. After 3 weeks, individuals who have not responded will be contacted via telephone. The survey will remain open for a period of 4 weeks, up to 8 if necessary.

Objective 2

Design

This aim will use expert ratings of existing quality measures obtained via functional job analysis (FJA).

Methodology overview—understanding FJA

Before rating the coordinative complexity of each outcome, a structured list is needed of the tasks required to perform each measure to standard. We will use functional job analysis (FJA), a task-oriented methodology commonly utilized for systematically describing the complexity of work, to accomplish this. FJA methodology and its use in healthcare have been extensively documented elsewhere [2629] and is therefore only briefly described here. FJA uses task statements as the basic building blocks of human resource management and organizational strategic planning. Task statements describe the work content, worker characteristics, and the work organization [26]. Once developed, these tasks can then be rated on the complexity of worker interaction, providing a measure of coordination complexity.

In an FJA, tasks required to complete a performance measure to standard are identified through subject matter expert (SME) input. It is from the information in these task statements that ratings of coordinative complexity will be assigned to each EPRP measure. Once the requisite tasks are generated and edited to conform to the standard FJA linguistic and format requirements, they are rated according to their complexity with respect to the functional skill dimension worker interaction, which rates each task on the complexity of interaction needed among personnel to complete the task.

Participants

SMEs for the FJA will consist of eight 3rd and 4th year residents in VA Primary Care rotations that have been identified by collaborating physicians as having experience with the clinical work involved in satisfying the EPRP measures used in this study.

Measures

Clinical performance

The measures of clinical performance to be rated will be the same as those used in objective 1.

Coordinative complexity

Coordinative complexity is conceptualized here as the complexity of interactions among personnel in a clinical performance measure’s component tasks. Coordinative complexity for each EPRP measure will be calculated as the average of the Worker Interaction scale ratings for the set of tasks comprising each EPRP measure (See Additional file 1 for the scale). We will be assessing a total of 25 measures of clinical coordinative complexity. Ratings for 17 of the 25 measures proposed were developed in earlier pilot work; thus, ratings for only 8 of the EPRP measures are needed. An important feature of coordinative complexity is that it is considered a static characteristic of each clinical performance measure; coordinative complexity ratings should be invariant across individuals or sites because it is the work, not the worker or the work environment, that is complex or simple.

Procedure

Identifying the work requirements for each performance measure

To identify the set of tasks required to accomplish each EPRP measure, we will use FJA. The SMEs will receive a document containing each EPRP measure and its definition according to the EPRP Technical Manual. For each measure, the SMEs will independently list all of the tasks required to satisfy the criteria for the measure. SMEs’ responses will then be compiled into a single list of tasks each measure. The resulting tasks will be cross-checked against a validated database of primary care tasks created using FJA as well as the task bank created from our pilot work [27].

Tasks in the task bank follow a structured format and have been rated on coordinative complexity. For tasks listed by the SMEs with matching tasks in either database, we will use the validated task and its ratings. Tasks without a database match will be generated in a series of focus groups with the SMEs and will conform to FJA task structure and format. For each unmatched task, SMEs will describe the specific behaviors and actions, knowledge, skills, abilities, and tools required to achieve the result listed in the task. Tasks generated from the focus group will then be edited as needed to ensure they conform to FJA structure. The SMEs will review the final set of tasks for each measure to confirm whether the tasks associated with each measure comprise at least 85 % of the work required to accomplish the measure to criterion [26], to ensure the task bank is sufficiently complete to cover the set of tasks performed in the EPRP measures [29].

Rating the performance measures on coordinative complexity

Two independent raters from the research team will rate each newly generated task on coordinative complexity using the standardized scale prescribed by FJA. Discrepancies in ratings will be resolved by consensus. We will average the coordinative complexity ratings across all tasks within an EPRP measure to arrive at a measure-level rating of coordinative complexity.

Objective 3

Participants, measures, and procedure

To examine the effect of coordinative complexity on the association between coordination and clinical performance, the same datasets, measures, and participants from objective 1 will be used in conjunction with the coordinative complexity ratings generated in objective 2.

Data analysis plan (all aims)

Sample representativeness

We will perform comparisons to evaluate the representativeness of our sample. First, we will compare the sample’s distribution along several demographic characteristics (age, gender, race, years in VA, and clinical specialty for providers) to the distribution of the population of VA Primary Care Clinics using the χ2 Goodness-of-Fit test and t tests, where appropriate. Next, we will compare the sample’s distribution to the distribution of all PACT team members invited along the same demographic characteristics. These comparisons in concert will provide a more nuanced picture of representativeness than a simple response rate. In addition, to check for the representativeness of the PACTs themselves, we will use the χ2 Goodness-of-Fit test to compare the sample’s distribution of PACT configurations to that of the overall VA PACT population. Finally, we will compare the distribution of facility characteristics of all VAMCs to those of VAMCs whose teams responded to our survey.

Survey psychometric evaluation

We will use the 500 PACTs from the validation sample to assess preliminary psychometric evaluations of the items designed to measure Okhuysen and Bechky’s coordination constructs. We will then use the data from the full survey deployment to 1600 PACTs as a cross validation for the derived model based on the smaller validation sample and conduct a two-level multilevel confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) with maximum likelihood estimation to determine the fit of the model to the larger sample. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) will be calculated to examine the dependency of PACTs within VAs. Assuming the ICC is significant, a two-level multilevel CFA will be conducted with maximum likelihood estimation to determine the fit of the items to the theorized coordination constructs. We are primarily interested in the fit of the level-one model (i.e., the PACTs).

If the model fit statistics are not acceptable (e.g., CFI or TLI < 0.95, RMSEA or SRMR > 0.05), we will conduct a multilevel exploratory factor analysis using oblique rotation overall and within each content area to examine dimensionality, using parallel analysis to determine the appropriate number of factors [30, 31]. The simple structure of each item will then be examined and will aid in determining which particular items should be retained in a given factor. Each construct is expected to be unidimensional. However, if multiple dimensions emerge, they will be reviewed for interpretability and sub-dimensions may be created. We will compute Cronbach’s alpha for each factor/dimension to evaluate the internal consistency reliability. After evaluating the measurement model for Okhuysen and Bechky’s coordination constructs, we will then estimate direct and indirect effects to test the theoretically derived structural model of team coordination. In brief, coordinating mechanisms (i.e., plans and rules) are thought to predict integrating conditions (i.e., accountability, predictability, common understanding) through a variety of coordination processes.

PACT-level aggregation

The first step in identifying PACT-level coordination practices is aggregating individual survey responses to the PACT level. Commonly, item responses from members of each team are averaged to obtain a group level estimate of each individual item and then average those responses to form the scale. In the case of an inherently collective construct such as coordination, however, differences in individual responses do not constitute measurement error but rather real variability and a valuable component of the construct. To capture this phenomenon in the scores, we will calculate rwg, interrater agreement, for each coordination construct for each PACT, and weight each PACT’s coordination construct scores by their respective rwg scores. rwg indices range from 0 to 1 (1 indicating perfectly homogeneous within-PACT scores on an item) [32].

EPRP measurements from 6 months prior to 6 months after deployment of the survey will be averaged together to create a single representative measure of performance. This will provide a more stable estimate of clinical performance than a single quarter’s data.

Descriptive statistics and preliminary diagnostics

Preliminary summary statistics will be calculated for the coordination practices, coordinative complexity, and PACT integration variables to investigate characteristics such as distributional properties, presence of ceiling or floor effects, and missing data. We will examine the data for missing values and use multiple imputation procedures to replace, if necessary, the missing data with values that reflect the uncertainty about which values to impute.

Hypothesis tests

We will use an analysis of variance test or Kruskal-Wallis test (if residuals are not normally distributed) to evaluate differences in coordinative complexity between existing outpatient EPRP measures (objective 2). Objectives 1b and 3 will both be evaluated with hierarchical linear modeling [33]. Two-level hierarchical linear models will be constructed, with PACTs nested within facilities. The PACT’s average EPRP score will be the dependent variable, and coordination constructs from the survey will be level 1 (between-PACT) independent variables. We will only include the most downstream endogenous coordination variables as predictors in our models. Although it depends on the psychometric evaluation of Okhuysen and Bechky’s model described above, integrating conditions (i.e., accountability, predictability, common understanding) are theoretically the most important coordination constructs that all other constructs lead to and, therefore, we anticipate they will be the independent variables in our models. PACT integration will be included as a level 1 covariate. Objective 1b will be supported if coordination practices significantly predict clinical performance.

In order to test objective 3, we will first group performance measures into those with varying levels of (e.g., higher versus lower) coordinative complexity. We will then conduct a two-level hierarchical linear models (identical to the one described above) for each level of coordinative complexity and will statistically compare regression coefficients. As before, models will include PACT integration as a covariate. Hypothesis 3 will be supported if coordination complexity is more strongly related to performance among measures that have higher coordinative complexity.

Study status

The instrument is currently developed and ready for deployment, clinical performance metrics selected, and potential participants identified. We are currently in the process of piloting the survey for psychometric soundness before beginning principal data collection.

Discussion

Contributions to practice

Addressing the current gaps in our understanding of coordination within clinical care settings, this study will provide an in-depth look at the specific fundamental practices involved in coordination, their impact on clinical outcomes, and the role of coordinative complexity in these relationships. Understanding which aspects of care require the most complex levels of coordination and how specific coordination practices are associated with clinical performance will allow for maximization of the efficacy of the implementation of coordinated team-based work. The results of this study will aid the implementation of the care teams by elucidating which coordination practices are most likely to result in improved care.

Contributions to science

Assessing coordination within a large sample of teams allows us to simultaneously test all aspects of coordination; this will constitute a material contribution to the literature as coordination, and team-based research often suffers from small sample sizes. To our knowledge, this will be the first empirical test of this comprehensive coordination framework as a whole.

Limitations

Although we utilize longitudinal multi-source data to assess our objectives, there are several limitations of the proposed design. First, the population of outpatient primary care providers at the VA were selected due to the recent implementation of PACTS; however, this restriction limits the generalizability of the results and future research will be needed to assess the applicability of the results to other healthcare facilities and types of care. Second, although we implement a validation sample to help in the creation and psychometric assessment of scales, the coordination literature lacks clear measurement strategies and developed scales. Therefore, although we preliminarily assess the validity of the scales utilized, the dimensionality and validity inferences are limited to the sample of VA care providers and will need to be replicated in other samples to comprehensively understand the psychometric utility of these scales.

Ethics, consent, and permissions

This study was reviewed and approved for ethics compliance by Baylor College of Medicine’s Institutional Review Board (BCM IRB; H-30952). Consent to participate and consent to publish are not applicable for this study—no individual information or participants will be utilized. Participants in the survey portion of the study will be asked to provide informed consent, using a BCM IRB-approved consent form, to participate, prior to access to the survey link. No individual data will be reported or published.

References

  1. Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. Rewarding Provider Performance: Aligning Incentives in Medicare. Washington DC: National Academies Press; 2006.

    Google Scholar 

  2. McDonald K, Sundaram V, Bravata D, Lewis R, Lin N, Kraft S, et al. Closing the Quality Gap: A Critical Analysis of Quality Improvement Strategies. Vol 7 -- Care Coordination Report No.: 04(07)-0051-7. Rockville: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2007.

    Google Scholar 

  3. Committee on Identifying Priority Areas for Quality Improvement. Priority Areas for National Action: Transforming Health Care Quality. Washington DC: National Academies Press; 2011.

    Google Scholar 

  4. American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Physicians, American Osteopathic Association: Joint principles of the patient-centered medical home. URL: http://www.aafp.org/dam/AAFP/documents/practice_management/pcmh/initiatives/PCMHJoint.pdf. Accessed 10 Aug 2015.

  5. Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. Crossing the quality chasm: a new health care system for the 21st century. Washington DC: National Academies Press; 2001.

    Google Scholar 

  6. Patient Centered Primary Care Implementation Work Group. Patient Centered Medical Home Model Concept Paper. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Primary Care Program Office; 2011. http://www.vacareers.va.gov/assets/common/print/pcmh_conceptpaper.pdf

  7. Department of Veterans Affairs. Patient Aligned Care Team (PACT) Handbook. Washington, DC: Author. VHA Handbook 1101.10:1–65, 2014. Accessed 10 Sept 2015. URL: http://www.va.gov/vhapublications/ViewPublication.asp?pub_ID=2977

  8. Okhuysen GA, Bechky BA. Coordination in Organizations: An Integrative Perspective. Academy of Management Annals. 2009;3:463–502.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  9. True G, Solimeo SL, Stewart GL. Work Role Transformation during PACT Implementation: Successes and Challenges. PACT Cyber Seminar Series. 2012. http://www.hsrd.research.va.gov/for_researchers/cyber_seminars/archives/pact-032112.pdf. Accessed 15 Oct 2015.

  10. Hysong SJ, Esquivel A, Sittig DF, Paul LA, Espadas D, Singh S, et al. Toward Successful Coordination of Electronic Health Record Based-Referrals: A Qualitative Analysis. Implementation Science. 2011;6:84–96.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  11. Helfrich CD, Dolan ED, Simonetti J, Reid RJ, Joos S, Wakefield BJ, et al. Elements of team-based care in a patient-centered medical home are associated with lower burnout among VA primary care employees. JGenInternMed. 2014;29 Suppl 2:S659–66.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  12. Bal R, Mastboom F, Spiers HP, Rutten H. The product and process of referral: optimizing general practitioner-medical specialist interaction through information technology. Int J Med Informatics. 2007;76:S28–34.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  13. Berendsen AJ, de Jong GM, Meyboom-de Jong B, Dekker JH, Schuling J. Transition of care: experiences and preferences of patients across the primary/secondary interface - a qualitative study. BMC Health Serv Res. 2009;9:62.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  14. Forrest CB, Glade GB, Baker AE. Bocian a, von Schrader S, Starfield B: Coordination of specialty referrals and physician satisfaction with referral care. Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine. 2000;154:499–506.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  15. Stille CJ, Jerant A, Bell D, Meltzer D, Elmore JG. Coordinating Care across Diseases, Settings, and Clinicians: A Key Role for the Generalist in Practice. Annals of Internal Medicine. 2005;142:700–8.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  16. Campbell DJ. Task complexity: A review and analysis. Academy of Management Review. 1988;13:40–52.

    Google Scholar 

  17. Hysong SJ, Khan MM, Amspoker AB, Petersen LA. All Clinical Performance Measures are Not Created Equal: The Role of Interaction Among Clinical Personnel on Measured Performance. Boston: Paper presented at the AcademyHealth Annual Research Meeting; 2012.

    Google Scholar 

  18. Hysong SJ. Organizational Correlates of Outpatient Performance Trends in VAMCs. Annual Career Development Meeting of the Veterans Administration Health Services Research and Development Service 2011 Feb16.

  19. Singh H, Spitzmueller C, Petersen NJ, Sawhney MK, Smith MW, Murphy DR, et al. Primary care practitioners’ views on test result management in EHR-enabled health systems: a national survey. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2013;20:727–35.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  20. Office of Quality and Performance: Technical Manual for the VHA Performance Measurement System including JCAHO Hospital Core Measures. Veterans Health Administration. 2006. http://vaww.rs.rtp.med.va.gov/ReportServer/Pages/ReportViewer.aspx?/Performance+Reports/Measure+Management/MeasureCatalog&rs:Command=Render. Accessed 10 Aug 2015.

  21. Schectman G, Stark R, Shear J, Corrigan K. PACT Recognition Second Cycle – FY12. Internal presentation. Washington, DC: Primary Care Program Office; 2012. Available: http://vaww.infoshare.va.gov/sites/primarycare/mh/pcmhinfo/PACTRecognition/General%20PACT%20Recognition%20Documents/2014/Outline%20PACT%20Recognition%20Process%20and%20Criteria.pptx. Accessed 10 Aug 2015.

    Google Scholar 

  22. DeVellis RF. Scale Development: Theory and Applications. 3rd ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications; 2011.

    Google Scholar 

  23. Duhachek A, Coughlan AT, Iacobucci D. Results on the standard error of the coefficient alpha index of reliability. Marketing Science. 2005;24:294–301.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  24. Dillman DA, Smyth JD, Christian LM. Internet, Mail, and Mixed Mode Survey: The Tailored Design Method. 3rd ed. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley & Sons; 2009.

    Google Scholar 

  25. Harris PA, Thielke R, Taylor R, Payne J, Gonzalez N, Conde JG. Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) - A metadata-driven methodology and workflow process for providing translational research informatics support. Journal of Biomedical Informatics. 2008;42:377–81.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  26. Fine SA, Cronshaw SF. Functional Job Analysis: a Foundation for Human Resources Management. Mahwah, New Jersey: Psychology Press; 1995.

    Google Scholar 

  27. Best RG, Pugh JA. VHA primary care task database [CD-ROM]. San Antonio: South Texas Veterans Health Care System; 2006.

    Google Scholar 

  28. Hysong SJ, Amspoker, A, Petersen, LA: A novel method for assessing task complexity in outpatient clinical-performance measure. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2016, in press.

  29. Cronshaw SF, Best RG, Zugec L, Warner M, Hysong SJ, Pugh JA. A five-component validation model for functional job analysis as used in job redesign. Ergometrika. 2007;4:12–3.

    Google Scholar 

  30. Horn JL. A rationale and test for the number of factors in factor analysis. Psychometrika. 1965;32:179–85.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  31. Hayton JC, Allen DG, Scarpello VG. Factor retention decisions in exploratory factor analysis: A tutorial on parallel analysis. Organizational Research Methods. 2004;7:191–205.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  32. James LR, Demaree RG, Wolf G. Estimating Within-Group Interrater Reliability With and Without Response Bias. Journal of Applied Psychology. 1984;69:85–98.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  33. Raudenbush SW, Bryk AS. Hierarchical Linear Models. Applications and Data Analysis Methods. 2nd ed. Newbury Park/London/New Delhi. 2002

Download references

Acknowledgements

This material is the result of work supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Health Services Research and Development Service (grant no. IIR 12-383), and supported with resources and the use of facilities at the Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety (CIN 13-413) at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center. The views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the position or policy of their affiliate institutions. The authors would like to thank Thach Tran and Amanda Auron for their daily contributions that make execution of this study possible.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Sylvia J. Hysong.

Additional information

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

SJH acted as the principal investigator, conceptualized and secured funding for the study, prepared the initial protocol draft, and materially edited the manuscript. She was also responsible for overseeing all aspects of the study. CT had the principal responsibility for the preparation and editing of the protocol manuscript and was responsible for the objective 2 data collection and data analysis (under AA’s supervision). CS conceptualized and oversaw the survey development, materially edited the study protocol, and led the survey validation. AA had the principal responsibility for all the study analyses, conceptualized the analytic strategy, and materially edited the manuscript. VM gave material contributions to the selection of metrics and data sources and had the principal responsibility for the study coordination and data management. LW and AN provided material contributions to the selection of the study participants, subject matter experts, and clinical performance measures. They also provided material edits to the protocol manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Additional file

Additional file 1:

Description and definitions for Worker Interaction Scale used to measure coordinative complexity. (PDF 77 kb)

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Hysong, S.J., Thomas, C.L., Spitzmüller, C. et al. Linking clinician interaction and coordination to clinical performance in Patient-Aligned Care Teams. Implementation Sci 11, 7 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-015-0368-0

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-015-0368-0

Keywords