Patient and Caregiver Relevant Outcome (PCRO) iLibraries

Patient and Caregiver Relevant Outcome (PCRO) iLibraries

Welcome to the IMPACT Patient and Caregiver Relevant Outcome (PCRO) iLibraries

The IMPACT PCRO iLibraries hold organized information on selected outcome measures for pragmatic trials enrolling people living with Alzheimer’s disease or related dementias (AD/ADRD). They are designed to support the overall goal of the IMPACT Collaboratory – to build capacity to conduct embedded pragmatic clinical trials (ePCTs) to improve outcomes for people living with dementia  (PLWD) and their care partners.

  • PCRO iLibrary – Administrative Sources is a resource of outcome assessments that can be found in existing data
  • PCRO iLibrary – Clinical Assessments contains patient-reported outcomes (PROs), caregiver-reported outcomes (CROs), observer-reported outcomes (ObsROs), performance outcomes (PerfOs), and clinician-reported outcomes (ClinROs) that have been used in pragmatic AD/ADRD trials

Click on one of the links above to learn more about either the Administrative Sources or Clinical Assessments iLibrary.

Learn more about the PCRO Core.

Stakeholder Engagement in ePCTs for People Living with Dementia

May 2020 – In Grand Rounds 6, Ellen Tambor, MA from IMPACT's Engaging Partners Team presents on the special considerations for engaging stakeholders in ePCTs for AD/ADRD and provides an overview of plans for promoting meaningful stakeholder engagement in the IMPACT Collaboratory.

Speaker

Ellen Tambor, MA

Ellen Tambor, MA

Executive Committee, Engaging Partners Team

Research Director, Center for Medical Technology Policy

Learning Objectives

  • Describe the rationale for stakeholder engagement in research and the importance of engaging stakeholders in ePCTs
  • Understand special considerations for engaging stakeholders in ePCTS for AD/ADRD.
  • Describe plans for promoting robust stakeholder engagement throughout the IMPACT Collaboratory.

IMPACT Collaboratory funds two pilot study awards

The National Institute on Aging (NIA) Imbedded Pragmatic Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and AD-Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) Clinical Trials (IMPACT) Collaboratory is happy to announce the recipients of its inaugural cycle of the IMPACT Pilot Grant award program. Recipients were selected from an impressive group of competitive applications.

IMPACT Pilot Grant Award Recipients (RFA 2019)

Brent Forester, MD, MSc, Mass General Brigham
Implementation of the Care Ecosystem training model for individuals with dementia in a high risk, integrated care management program

Ula Hwang, MD, MPHIcahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Pathway to Detection & Differentiation of Delirium & Dementia in the Emergency Department

About IMPACT Collaboratory

The IMPACT Collaboratory was established in 2019 to meet the urgent public health need to deliver high quality, evidence-based care to people living with dementia (PLWD) and their care partners within the healthcare systems (HCS) that serve them.  The IMPACT Collaboratory accomplishes this mission by building the nation’s capacity to conduct embedded pragmatic clinical trials (ePCTs) among people living with dementia and their care partners through building investigator capacity, funding and supporting the design and conduct of ePCTs, and ensuring the research includes culturally-tailored interventions and people from diverse and under-represented backgrounds.

The IMPACT Collaboratory brings together multidisciplinary experts from across the nation organized into 10 Working Cores Groups and Teams. The cores and teams partner with health care system leaders and key stakeholders to support the IMPACT mission. The IMPACT Collaboratory hosts monthly Grand Rounds and podcasts open to everyone to provide insight into conducting ePCTs for PLWD and their care partners. Learn more on our website, Twitter and LinkedIn.

About IMPACT Collaboratory’s Pilot Grant Program

The IMPACT Collaboratory funds several one-year pilot studies annually, which are meant to generate the preliminary data necessary to design and conduct future full-scale, stage 4 effectiveness ePCTs funded through other grant mechanisms. Awards are for single Principal Investigator applications for one year and are non-renewable. The IMPACT Collaboratory encourages applications that address dementia care for people of all backgrounds and promote health equity.

Currently Accepting Applications for 2020 IMPACT Pilot Grant Program

Award applications for the current awards cycle opened April 28, 2020. The application process is a 2-step competitive process. The first step, a mandatory LOI, is due no later than May 29, 2020.  Selected investigators will be invited to submit a full application.

In response to the coronavirus disease (COVID-2019) outbreak, in this award cycle, the IMPACT Collaboratory will prioritize applications proposing pilot ePCTs of telemedicine, telehealth, and remote technologies interventions aimed at improving the health care, unmet needs, quality of life and/or health outcomes for people living with AD/ADRD and their care partners. Applications for pilot ePCTs testing other types of non-pharmacological interventions in this population will also be considered.

Please join our mailing list to receive news and invitations to events and Grand Rounds.

COVID-19 Grand Rounds & Podcast May 2020

COVID-19 in Nursing Homes: Pragmatic Research Responses to the Crisis

May 2020 – In this Special Grand Rounds, Drs. Grabowski, Mitchell, and Mor, experts in dementia care and pragmatic clinical trials, provide an update on how COVID-19 is impacting nursing homes and to share preliminary data for research related to COVID-19.

Download Webinar Slides

David Grabowski, PhD

David Grabowski, PhD

Professor of Health Care Policy

Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School

Vince Mor, PhD 

Vince Mor, PhD 

Principal Investigator, Administration Core (AC)
Member, Steering Committee

Professor of Health Services, Policy & Practice and the Florence Pirce Grant University Health, Brown University School of Public Health
Research Health Scientist, Providence Veterans Administration Medical Center

Susan Mitchell, MD, MPH

Susan Mitchell, MD, MPH

Principal Investigator, Administration & Management Core (AC)
Member, Steering Committee

Senior Scientist, Hebrew SeniorLife’s Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research
Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Faculty, Division of Geriatrics, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

 

Learning Objectives

  • Learn about impact of COVID-19 in U.S nursing homes
  • Gain knowledge about rapid pragmatic research approaches in response to the crisis in health care systems
    • Hebrew SeniorLife
    • Genesis Health Care
    • Bluestone

 

Health equity as foundational to the design of pragmatic trials

April 2020 – In Grand Rounds 5, Drs. Quiñones and Jackson discuss health equity issues have not yet been fully considered, assessed, or integrated into ePCT designs. Health disparities populations may not be well represented in ePCTs without special efforts to identify and successfully recruit sites of care that serve larger numbers of these populations.

 

Speakers

Ana Quiñones, PhD, MS

Ana Quiñones, PhD, MS

Team Leader, Health Equity Team (HET)

Associate Professor, Department of Family Medicine, OHSU-PSU School of Public Health, Oregon Health & Science University

Jonathan Jackson, PhD

Jonathan Jackson, PhD
Executive Committee, Health Equity Team (HET)

Instructor in Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital
Instructor, Harvard Medical School

Learning Objectives

  • Understand the role and objectives of the Health Equity Team in the IMPACT Collaboratory.
  • Describe the conceptualization of health equity as it relates to ePCTs design.
  • Understand and describe important health equity considerations in the design of ePCTs.

 

Two new IMPACT Collaboratory funding opportunities: Request for Applications for Pilot Grant Award and Career Development Award Programs

The National Institute on Aging (NIA) IMbedded Pragmatic Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and AD-Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) Clinical Trials (IMPACT) Collaboratory has released two new funding opportunities available for investigators interested in developing embedded pragmatic clinical trials in dementia research. In support of our mission, the IMPACT Collaboratory is requesting applications for the Pilot Grant Award and Career Development Award (CDA) Programs.

Pilot Grant Awards are 1-year non-renewable awards to generate the preliminary data necessary to design and conduct future full-scale embedded pragmatic clinical trials (ePCTs) of non-pharmacological interventions in healthcare systems for people living with AD/ADRD and/or their care partners.

Career Development Awards are 2-year mentored research awards to support the development of early-stage MD, PhD, or equivalent researchers who seek careers conducting ePCTs for people living with AD/ADRD and/or their care partners.

The IMPACT Collaboratory will hold informational webinars for each grant program in the coming weeks. Detailed information about these programs as well as timelines, eligibility, and other requirements are provided below and in the request for applications (RFAs). Updates will be posted to impactcollaboratory.org.

Pilot Grant Program RFA

The IMPACT Collaboratory will fund up to five 1-year non-renewable pilot grant awards for up to $175,000 in direct costs. Letters of intent are required and due May 29, 2020. Full proposal applications are by invitation only and will be due September 4, 2020. For further details, please see the on the IMPACT Pilot Grant Program webpage.

In response to the coronavirus disease (COVID-2019) outbreak, the IMPACT Collaboratory will prioritize applications proposing pilot ePCTs of telemedicine, telehealth, and remote technologies interventions aimed at improving health care, unmet needs, quality of life and/or health outcomes for people living with dementia and/or their care partners for this award cycle. Applications for pilot ePCTs testing other types of non-pharmacological interventions in this population will also be considered.

Two optional informational webinars will be held to provide additional information and answer questions from potential applicants. Registration is required and can be completed through the links below:

  • Informational Webinar #1 for IMPACT Pilot Grant RFA
    April 28, 2020 01:30 PM Eastern Time. Watch webinar here.
  • Informational Webinar #2 for IMPACT Pilot Grant RFA
    May 6, 2020 04:00 PM Eastern Time. Registration closed.

Registrants will receive a confirmation email containing information to join the webinar.

Career Development Award (CDA) RFA

The IMPACT Collaboratory will fund two to three, 2-year Career Development Awards (CDAs) to support the development of early-stage MD, PhD, or equivalent researchers who seek careers conducting embedded pragmatic clinical trials (ePCTs) for people living with dementia and their care partners. CDAs provide support for up to $100,000 per year in direct costs and candidates are required to devote a minimum of 75% effort toward the goals of the CDA. The IMPACT Collaboratory will prioritize applications that address dementia care for people of all backgrounds and promote health equity.

Full Applications are due July 15, 2020. There is no letter of intent. For further details, go to the IMPACT CDA Program webpage.

Two optional informational webinars will be held to provide additional information and answer questions from potential applicants. Registration is required and can be completed through the links below:

  • Informational Webinar #1 for IMPACT CDA
      April 29, 2020 03:00 PM Eastern Time. Registration closed.
  • Informational Webinar #2 for IMPACT CDA
      May 20, 2020 01:00 PM Eastern Time. Registration closed.

Registrants will receive a confirmation email containing information to join the webinar.

The IMPACT Collaboratory encourages all eligible researchers to take advantage these important funding opportunities, which have the potential to advance care for people living with dementia and/or their care partners in real-world settings. For more information about the IMPACT Collaboratory, please visit impactcollaboratory.org.

The NIA IMPACT Collaboratory is supported through funding from the National Institute on Aging (U54AG063546).

AcademyHealth report identifies health systems’ priority research questions on COVID-19

AcademyHealth has developed a report focused on information needs of the health care and community organizations engaged in the COVID-19 response. The report is intended to inform decision-making of federal and foundation funders of health services research to guide investments in responsive research.

Read the full report and background information on the AcademyHealth website.

Update from IMPACT Collaboratory: Stakeholder Engagement Report on Research Priorities

We are pleased to share a new report from the IMPACT Stakeholder Engagement Team, led by Gary Epstein-Lubow, MD and Katie Maslow, MSW, regarding stakeholder research priorities.

This report is a compilation of work beginning with input from the NIA IMPACT Collaboratory’s Stakeholder Advisory Committee and then finalized after additional Stakeholder Engagement Team discussion during and following the NIA IMPACT Collaboratory in-person meeting January 28 & 29, 2020.

The IMPACT Collaboratory’s Stakeholder Engagement Team (SET) conducted a one-day in-person meeting on December 3, 2019 including members of the Stakeholder Advisory Committee (SAC) and additional participants relevant to the IMPACT Collaboratory’s efforts regarding stakeholder engagement.

 

 

Unroe co-created a video for advance care planning for nursing home residents during COVID-19

Kathleen Unroe, MD, MHA, Associate Core Leader of the IMPACT Pilot Studies Core co-created with Susan Hickman, PhD, a video for advance care planning for nursing home residents during the COVID-19 pandemic. This is an excellent resource from the Indiana University Center for Aging Research, Regenstrief Institute for people living with dementia (PLWD) and their caregivers in this setting during the COVID-19 crisis, and a reminder about the importance of advance care planning.

Find link to video here: https://youtu.be/F_cS89aa0DE

IMPACT Ethics and Regulation Core

The Ethics and Regulation Core (previously known as the Regulation and Ethics Core) focuses on clarifying the balance among the competing priorities of conducting ePCTs in people living with dementia (PLWD) and their care partners, protecting the interests of participants, and assuring health care systems that regulatory issues are addressed. Learn more about the core's work from Core Leader Jason Karlawish, MD.

 

 

 

 

The IMPACT Collaboratory Regulation and Ethics Core from NIA IMPACT Collaboratory on Vimeo.