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Building a Governance Strategy for CER: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network Experience

INTRODUCTION: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network was established with funding from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) in 2014. The PORTAL team adapted governance structures and processes from past research network collaborations. We will review a...

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Autores principales: Paolino, Andrea R., McGlynn, Elizabeth A., Lieu, Tracy, Nelson, Andrew F., Prausnitz, Stephanie, Horberg, Michael A., Arterburn, David E., Gould, Michael K., Laws, Reesa L., Steiner, John F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AcademyHealth 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4827785/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27141524
http://dx.doi.org/10.13063/2327-9214.1216
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author Paolino, Andrea R.
McGlynn, Elizabeth A.
Lieu, Tracy
Nelson, Andrew F.
Prausnitz, Stephanie
Horberg, Michael A.
Arterburn, David E.
Gould, Michael K.
Laws, Reesa L.
Steiner, John F.
author_facet Paolino, Andrea R.
McGlynn, Elizabeth A.
Lieu, Tracy
Nelson, Andrew F.
Prausnitz, Stephanie
Horberg, Michael A.
Arterburn, David E.
Gould, Michael K.
Laws, Reesa L.
Steiner, John F.
author_sort Paolino, Andrea R.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network was established with funding from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) in 2014. The PORTAL team adapted governance structures and processes from past research network collaborations. We will review and outline the structures and processes of the PORTAL governance approach and describe how proactively focusing on priority areas helped us to facilitate an ambitious research agenda. BACKGROUND: For years a variety of funders have supported large-scale infrastructure grants to promote the use of clinical datasets to answer important comparative effectiveness research (CER) questions. These awards have provided the impetus for health care systems to join forces in creating clinical data research networks. Often, these scientific networks do not develop governance processes proactively or systematically, and address issues only as problems arise. Even if network leaders and collaborators foresee the need to develop governance approaches, they may underestimate the time and effort required to develop sound processes. The resulting delays can impede research progress. INNOVATION: Because the PORTAL sites had built trust and a foundation of collaboration by participating with one another in past research networks, essential elements of effective governance such as guiding principles, decision making processes, project governance, data governance, and stakeholders in governance were familiar to PORTAL investigators. This trust and familiarity enabled the network to rapidly prioritize areas that required sound governance approaches: responding to new research opportunities, creating a culture of trust and collaboration, conducting individual studies, within the broader network, assigning responsibility and credit to scientific investigators, sharing data while protecting privacy/security, and allocating resources. The PORTAL Governance Document, complete with a Toolkit of Appendices is included for reference and for adaptation by other networks. CREDIBILITY: As a result of identifying project-based governance priorities (IRB approval, subcontracting, selection of new research including lead PI and participating sites, and authorship) and data governance priorities (reciprocal data use agreement, analytic plan procedures, and other tools for data governance), PORTAL established most of its governance structure by Month 6 of the 18 month project. This allowed science to progress and collaborators to experience first-hand how the structures and procedures functioned in the remaining 12 months of the project, leaving ample time to refine them and to develop new structures or processes as necessary. DISCUSSION: The use of procedures and processes with which participating investigators and their home institutions were already familiar allowed project and regulatory requirements to be established quickly to protect patients, their data, and the health care systems that act as stewards for both. As the project progressed, PORTAL was able to test and adjust the structures it put place, and to make substantive revisions by Month 17. As a result, priority processes have been predictable, transparent and effective. CONCLUSION/NEXT STEPS: Strong governance practices are a stewardship responsibility of research networks to justify the trust of patients, health plan members, health care delivery organizations, and other stakeholders. Well-planned governance can reduce the time necessary to initiate the scientific activities of a network, a particular concern when the time frame to complete research is short. Effective network and data governance structures protect patient and institutional data as well as the interests of investigators and their institutions, and assures that the network has built an environment to meet the goals of the research.
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spelling pubmed-48277852016-05-02 Building a Governance Strategy for CER: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network Experience Paolino, Andrea R. McGlynn, Elizabeth A. Lieu, Tracy Nelson, Andrew F. Prausnitz, Stephanie Horberg, Michael A. Arterburn, David E. Gould, Michael K. Laws, Reesa L. Steiner, John F. EGEMS (Wash DC) Articles INTRODUCTION: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network was established with funding from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) in 2014. The PORTAL team adapted governance structures and processes from past research network collaborations. We will review and outline the structures and processes of the PORTAL governance approach and describe how proactively focusing on priority areas helped us to facilitate an ambitious research agenda. BACKGROUND: For years a variety of funders have supported large-scale infrastructure grants to promote the use of clinical datasets to answer important comparative effectiveness research (CER) questions. These awards have provided the impetus for health care systems to join forces in creating clinical data research networks. Often, these scientific networks do not develop governance processes proactively or systematically, and address issues only as problems arise. Even if network leaders and collaborators foresee the need to develop governance approaches, they may underestimate the time and effort required to develop sound processes. The resulting delays can impede research progress. INNOVATION: Because the PORTAL sites had built trust and a foundation of collaboration by participating with one another in past research networks, essential elements of effective governance such as guiding principles, decision making processes, project governance, data governance, and stakeholders in governance were familiar to PORTAL investigators. This trust and familiarity enabled the network to rapidly prioritize areas that required sound governance approaches: responding to new research opportunities, creating a culture of trust and collaboration, conducting individual studies, within the broader network, assigning responsibility and credit to scientific investigators, sharing data while protecting privacy/security, and allocating resources. The PORTAL Governance Document, complete with a Toolkit of Appendices is included for reference and for adaptation by other networks. CREDIBILITY: As a result of identifying project-based governance priorities (IRB approval, subcontracting, selection of new research including lead PI and participating sites, and authorship) and data governance priorities (reciprocal data use agreement, analytic plan procedures, and other tools for data governance), PORTAL established most of its governance structure by Month 6 of the 18 month project. This allowed science to progress and collaborators to experience first-hand how the structures and procedures functioned in the remaining 12 months of the project, leaving ample time to refine them and to develop new structures or processes as necessary. DISCUSSION: The use of procedures and processes with which participating investigators and their home institutions were already familiar allowed project and regulatory requirements to be established quickly to protect patients, their data, and the health care systems that act as stewards for both. As the project progressed, PORTAL was able to test and adjust the structures it put place, and to make substantive revisions by Month 17. As a result, priority processes have been predictable, transparent and effective. CONCLUSION/NEXT STEPS: Strong governance practices are a stewardship responsibility of research networks to justify the trust of patients, health plan members, health care delivery organizations, and other stakeholders. Well-planned governance can reduce the time necessary to initiate the scientific activities of a network, a particular concern when the time frame to complete research is short. Effective network and data governance structures protect patient and institutional data as well as the interests of investigators and their institutions, and assures that the network has built an environment to meet the goals of the research. AcademyHealth 2016-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4827785/ /pubmed/27141524 http://dx.doi.org/10.13063/2327-9214.1216 Text en All eGEMs publications are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
spellingShingle Articles
Paolino, Andrea R.
McGlynn, Elizabeth A.
Lieu, Tracy
Nelson, Andrew F.
Prausnitz, Stephanie
Horberg, Michael A.
Arterburn, David E.
Gould, Michael K.
Laws, Reesa L.
Steiner, John F.
Building a Governance Strategy for CER: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network Experience
title Building a Governance Strategy for CER: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network Experience
title_full Building a Governance Strategy for CER: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network Experience
title_fullStr Building a Governance Strategy for CER: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network Experience
title_full_unstemmed Building a Governance Strategy for CER: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network Experience
title_short Building a Governance Strategy for CER: The Patient Outcomes Research to Advance Learning (PORTAL) Network Experience
title_sort building a governance strategy for cer: the patient outcomes research to advance learning (portal) network experience
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4827785/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27141524
http://dx.doi.org/10.13063/2327-9214.1216
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