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Quality Improvement and Implementation Science in Health Care Systems: JGIM Top-Rated QIS/IS articles from 2021-2022

sgim - Society of General Internal Medicine
Quality Improvement and Implementation Science in Health Care Systems: JGIM Top-Rated QIS/IS articles from 2021-2022
Brought to you by the SGIM Ethics Committee.
Originally recorded on December 7, 2022.
Course description
This special JGIM Webinar presentation featuring the 3 top-rated QIS/IS articles of the past year, with an introduction by the Co-Editor-in Chief of JGIM and panel discussion led by the Director of the Im_Sci Lab at Columbia University, co-sponsors of this webinar with JGIM and SGIM.

• Improving Regional Blood Pressure Control: A Positive Deviance Tiered Intensity Approach
• Advancing Pharacological Treatments for Opioid Use Disorder (ADaPT-OUD): An Implementation Trial in Eight Veterans Health Administration Facilities
• Appling User-Centered Design to Develop Practical Strategies that Address Overuse in Primary Care

These three studies, spanning QIS and IS, highlight the work that is much needed to improve the delivery of health care and the translation of evidence-based medicine into general medicine practice.
Presenters
Shari Bolen
MD, MPH, Professor of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University; Founding Director, Population Health Research Institute; Director, Center for Health Care Research and Policy; The MetroHealth System
Hildi Hagedorn
PhD, LP, Implementation Scientist, Centers of Excellence in Substance Addiction Treatment & Education; VA Puget Sound, HCS/Philadelphia VAMC
Sarah Skurla
MPH, Project Manager, Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System
Moderator
Nathalie Moise
MD, MS, Florence Irving Assistant Professor of Medicine, Columbia University Medical Center; Director of Implementation Science Lab, Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health
Disclaimer
The user acknowledges that the workshops, handouts, and related course materials contained therein are intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered to be legal advice or a substitute for legal or clinical consultation. These presentations address issues that are multi-faceted, and the user should not assume that the courses discuss every law, regulation, or ethical code that may be relevant to the subject matter. Legal and ethical standards are subject to change, and it is always prudent to check to see whether a particular law, regulation, or ethical standard may have changed.

Refunds/Cancellations: SGIM does not offer refunds for On-Demand Library purchases.