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Date: Wednesday, June 25, 1997 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: AHCPR Public Affairs, Howard Holland,ext. 1374 (hholland@ahcpr.gov), Karen J. Migdail, (301) 594-1364 ext. 1375(kmigdail@ahcpr.gov)
"Consistent with the Department of Health and Human Services" and Secretary Shalala's commitment to quality of care, these studies will provide important measures to help physicians and other providers assess patients' well-being and imp rove outcomes of care," said AHCPR Administrator John M. Eisenberg, M.D.
AHCPR has awarded a total of $1.19 million for the first year of the projects. The newly funded projects are:
This study will expand the application and usefulness of the Quality of Well-Being (QWB) Scale, a widely used health status measure that helps determine the quality of life. Specifically, the project will eliminate two barriers that have prevent ed the QWB from being used as widely as other measures: the fact that it could not be self-administered and did not offer a profile of outcomes. The QWB is one of the most useful scales for cost-effectiveness studies. It also is considered to be more se nsitive to small changes in functional status than other similar scales.
This project will determine how variations in exercise training reduce mortality and increase the quality of life for patients suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). This study has the potential to decrease disability and he alth care utilization while improving quality of life through exercise. Documenting these benefits could provide the needed justification for including exercise as part of a standard of care for COPD patients.
This research will develop and test new statistical procedures for cost-effectiveness analyses. The research plan will address the development of models that reflect accurately the experience of patients in sustained and changing states of health . The results could have immediate application to a number of other studies, especially given the variations in the cost of medical procedures, drugs and devices.
This study will develop a predictive measure of lower-respiratory tract infections in infants that could serve as a guide to which infants should be hospitalized. Lower-respiratory tract illness (LRI) is the most common reason infants are hospitali zed after the neonatal period. LRI costs about $700 million annually.
This project will extend the techniques of computer-generated reminders to improving patient satisfaction and outcomes of care. It will also conduct a randomized controlled trial testing the effect on patient outcomes of a patient-centered, compu ter-assisted intervention targeted toward physicians and nurses.