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Submit Your Innovation
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality wants to hear about your innovative efforts to improve the delivery of
health care services and invites you to participate in the AHRQ Health Care Innovations Exchange.
The Innovations Exchange defines innovation as the implementation of new or altered products, services, processes,
systems, organizational structures, or business models as a means of improving one or more domains of health care
quality. However, AHRQ does not want to put too tight a frame around this term based on our review of the innovation
literature and expert consultations. Innovation can mean different things to different people, depending on sector as
well as organizational factors. An activity that is standard practice in one health care system may be cutting-edge for
another. While we will apply certain criteria to determine what belongs in the Innovations Exchange, our goal is to cast
a wide net that allows for differences across the health care industry.
Our Editorial Team will work with you to produce an accurate description of your
initiative1. This page explains what we look for and how to submit an
innovation for consideration.
If you have questions or think you have an innovation to submit, please e-mail us at:
info@innovations.ahrq.gov.
Why Participate in the Health Care Innovations Exchange? |
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- Contribute to the Greater Good – You will help advance positive changes in patient care
beyond the walls of your own institution. By submitting your innovation, you will help build a rich resource that
complements and enhances the usefulness of the traditional professional literature on health care services.
- Become a Community Leader – You will join a nationwide community of health care innovators,
who can both learn from you and support your efforts to design and implement innovations in your organization.
The Innovations Exchange will invite select innovators to serve as faculty for educational events.
The Editorial Team aims for breadth in the settings, populations, and services covered by the Innovations Exchange.
If we receive a large number of submissions, we will evaluate how well the innovation expands the current
collection of innovations on these dimensions, as well as priorities AHRQ has established. These priorities
include the following:
- Vulnerable populations. AHRQ is interested in identifying innovations to help reduce disparities
in health care and health status. Populations of interest to AHRQ are low-income groups, minority groups, women,
children, the elderly, and individuals with special health care needs.
- Potential for high impact. The Innovations Exchange gives preference to innovations that
significantly affect the overall value of health care. For example, the innovation may affect a broad population,
address a critical health issue, or demonstrate large cost savings.
- Innovator interest in participating. AHRQ gives priority to innovators interested in becoming
involved in other activities of the Innovations Exchange, such as participating in learning networks and writing
commentaries.
- AHRQ-funded innovations. The Innovations Exchange gives priority to innovations funded by AHRQ,
but does not exclude innovations funded by other sources.
Inclusion Criteria
To be considered an Innovation Profile, a health care innovation must meet six criteria. To be
considered an Innovation Attempt, a health care innovation must meet the same criteria as an
Innovation Profile except for effectiveness. The criteria, explained in detail below, are minimum eligibility
requirements. The decision to publish a description of your innovation ultimately depends on several factors
including an evaluation by the Editorial Team, AHRQ's priorities (see above), and the number of similar innovations
currently in the Innovations Exchange collection.
If you think your innovation meets most or all of the minimum requirements and you want to submit it for our
consideration, go to How To Submit An Innovation. If you have any questions about these
criteria, contact us at info@innovations.ahrq.gov.
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The innovation relates to patient care delivery processes.
Your innovation changes usual patient care processes and/or associated health services delivery. It does not have to
involve direct patient care or direct contact with health care consumers. However, it must have important implications
for the delivery of patient care—whether preventive, emergent, chronic, acute, rehabilitative, long-term, or
end-of-life. Innovations that involve devices, tools, technology, software, curricula, policies, procedures, and
changes to the physical environment qualify only if these items are used in innovative ways for the delivery of
health care services to patients.
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The innovation aims to improve one or more domains of health care quality.
Your innovation addresses one or more specific measurable indicators of quality in one or more of the domains
defined by the Institute of Medicine: effectiveness, efficiency, equity, patient-centeredness, safety, and timeliness.
The indicators you use do not have to come from an established measure set, but they must be clearly defined and
relevant to the quality issue your innovation addresses. Also, your innovation must not contradict established
standards of evidence-based care.
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The activity is truly innovative in the context of its setting or target population.
For the purposes of the Innovations Exchange, innovation refers to the creative implementation of new or altered
products, services, processes, systems, organizational structures, or business models to improve one or more
domains of health care quality. In this context, innovations are activities that are generally perceived as new
in a particular setting or for a particular population relative to the usual care processes. The Editorial Team
will assess the novelty of quality improvement initiatives/efforts including the context and conditions of the novel
approach against usual care delivery or care processes. In addition to brand new ideas, we welcome activities
adapted from other industries to health care, transferred from one health care setting or market segment to another,
drawn from settings in other countries, or applied to a new or different patient population. You must be able to
communicate how your innovation differs from what is regarded as standard practice in your organization and among
similar organizations. The Editorial Team will combine their working knowledge of the industry and knowledge by experts
with your perspective to make a final decision about novelty.
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Information about the innovation is publicly available.
Enough information must be freely available so that a user of the Innovations Exchange can understand the elements
of the innovation and make a decision about adopting it. This requirement does not exclude innovations that
incorporate commercial products or other materials for which there may be a fee or licensing requirements. All
information about the innovation doesn’t have to be publicly available, but the Editorial Team will need access to
information with sufficient detail to produce a comprehensive description.
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The innovator (or a representative) will contribute information to the Innovations Exchange.
A person knowledgeable about the innovation must participate in interviews with the Editorial Team and share available
written information about the innovation. This person must also confirm that he or she can speak on behalf of any
collaborating organizations and provide the name of a contact person who will be listed in the innovation description.
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There is reason to believe that the innovation will be effective.
You must be able to provide some evidence that the innovation is likely to achieve its goals. Ideally, this would
include some quantitative or qualitative support for a link between the activity and improved performance on the
defined quality indicator. However, if data are unavailable, limited, or lacking in methodological rigor, anecdotal
reports of the impact of the innovation may suffice. Otherwise, it may be considered as an Innovation Attempt.
Exclusion Criteria
Innovations that fall into any one of these categories will be excluded from the Innovations Exchange.
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Product or Technical Innovations.
These innovations include new drugs or devices, software design and development, or durable medical equipment or
supplies. Although advances in these areas may be innovative, to be eligible for inclusion in the Innovations
Exchange, you need to demonstrate a connection to an innovative service delivery change.
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Policy innovations.
Policy innovations such as legal or public policy changes, credentialing policy, or reimbursement policy are
outside the scope of the Innovations Exchange. For example, a purchaser-sponsored pay-for-performance initiative is
outside the scope. However, innovative service delivery changes in response to policy changes may be eligible. For
example, an innovative chronic disease management approach at a medical group that was motivated by an external
pay-for-performance program is within the scope of the Innovations Exchange.
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Educational Innovations.
Innovations such as curriculum redesigns, continuing education certification, or the use of simulators or other
technologies for training are outside the scope of the Innovations Exchange.
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Clinical Innovations.
Pure clinical innovations such as new surgical, medical, or dental therapies or professional techniques are outside
the scope of the Innovations Exchange.
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Health service delivery innovations without any evidence of effect.
An innovation without quantitative or qualitative support between the innovation and targeted health care outcomes or
processes is outside the scope of the Innovations Exchange.
Learn about the inclusion criteria.
Learn more about Innovation Profiles and Innovation Attempts.
Our development process has several steps:
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Identification: The Editorial Team searches the published and gray literature, as well as the Internet, to
identify activities that could be eligible for the Innovations Exchange. Innovations are also submitted by developers
and researchers at various kinds of health care organizations.
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Assessment: The Editorial Team assesses each innovation against the inclusion criteria. Once an innovation
is submitted, the Team typically responds with the results of this assessment within 1 month.
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Approval to proceed: If an innovation meets the inclusion criteria, the innovator is contacted. If willing to
participate, the innovator is asked to confirm that he or she can speak on behalf of any collaborating organizations,
and that the Innovations Exchange can link to any pertinent Web sites. The Editorial Team does not proceed with the
development of a description of the innovation until that confirmation is received.
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Development of Profile/Attempt: The Editorial Team drafts a profile of the innovation based on available
written information and input from the innovator.
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Innovator review: The Editorial Team sends a final draft to the innovator to review. Any comments received
from the innovator are incorporated as appropriate.
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Review: Published innovations are reviewed annually to ensure that the descriptions, including any Web links,
remain current.
To submit a candidate innovation for our consideration, contact the
Innovations Exchange at info@innovations.ahrq.gov.
Please provide the following information in the e-mail:
- Name of the main organization, along with any other organizations that are participating
in the innovation.
- Name and title of the submitter.
- Contact information for the submitter (e-mail address and phone number).
- Brief description of the innovation.
- Brief description of results, including any impact on the delivery of patient care.
- Description of the health care setting (e.g., hospital, community clinic, nursing home).
- Description of the population on which the innovation is focused, if any (e.g., the elderly, children, racial or ethnic group).
- Any funding sources for the innovation.
To determine what information to send us, you may review these documents summarizing the information included in a description of an innovation:
Elements of an Innovation Profile (Word®; 78 KB) (PDF; 29 KB);
Elements of an Innovation Attempt (Word®; 66 KB) (PDF; 22 KB).
(If you don't have the software to open this PDF, download free Adobe Acrobat Reader® software.)
If you have printed information about your innovation, you can fax it to us at 301-610-4950. Please address the fax to Innovations Exchange Editorial Teams, Westat, put the words "Innovation Submission" in the subject line, and include your contact information.
You may also mail information to Russ Mardon, RA-1140, Westat, 1650 Research Blvd., Rockville, MD 20850.
After reviewing and evaluating your submission against the minimum criteria, the Editorial Team will contact you for
further information.
If your innovation is accepted, the Editorial Team will confirm that you can speak on behalf of your organization
and collaborating organizations, and that the Innovations Exchange has permission to link to any pertinent Web sites
that your organization maintains. Once we receive your confirmation, we will draft a description of your innovation
and send it to you for review and comment before posting it on the site.
Note about privacy: If we select your submitted innovation for the Innovations Exchange, we may
publish information you provide as part of the innovation description unless that information is
confidential.
1The Office of Management and Budget has approved this information collection (OMB Control Number 0935-0147, Expiration Date March 16, 2011). The Control Number signifies that AHRQ has met the legal requirements in accordance with 5 CFR 1230.5 (b) Electronic Code of Federal Regulations
Last updated: July 6, 2009.
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