Health Care Delivery Needs to Be a Science Too
AHRQ director speaks at the School of Pharmacy’s annual Andrew G. DuMez lecture.
By Steve Berberich
May 10, 2011
Carolyn Clancy, MD, director of the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), says that although the U.S. “leads the way” in science to develop medical methods, the country still needs to treat health care delivery as a science.
Delivering the annual Andrew G. Dumez Memorial Lecture, “Improving Health Care Safety and Quality: Translating Science into Practice,” at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, Clancy provided a high-level view of the current challenges to improve the quality of care. She also addressed the pharmacists’ roles in those challenges. As a producer of what Clancy called “benchmark” reports for health care industry and policymakers, AHRQ “supports research that helps people make more informed decisions and improves the quality of health care services,” according to its website.
Clancy praised the current collaborative trend in health care research, which is designed to inform health care decisions by providing evidence on the effectiveness, benefits, and harms of different treatment options. The evidence is generated from research studies that compare drugs, medical devices, tests, surgeries, or ways to deliver health care. Such “patient-centered research,” she said, greases the skids of scientific advances into actual clinical practice and usable information for clinicians and patients.
During the creation of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, “All parties agreed,” she said, that “patient-centered care needs to involve more than clinical intervention. It also needs to include such things as drug-to-drug interaction, care management, avoiding [hospital stays]” and more.
Clancy said a recent AHRQ report found that progress has been made in data collection in the health care system as more providers are collecting and storing patient data. The team concept in health care transcends the “my data” mentality of the past, she said. “We are getting to a point when data are ubiquitous, allowing for more success in using comparative effectiveness as a tool, with improved methods that can support learning and improvement at the front lines of care delivery.”
Addressing the pharmacy students in attendance, Clancy said, “If there was ever a time when we need you, it is now. It is becoming increasingly important to safety and quality to do medicine as a team sport. And the pharmacist is a vital member of the team.”
As a young physician working at a free clinic in Richmond, Va., in the 1980s, Clancy “learned how much better it was to have a pharmacist on our team.” One day, immediately after seeing a patient, she overheard a pharmacist in the next room say to the patient, “‘Tell me what you heard [from the doctor].’ It was so powerful and important, I never forgot it.”
The DuMez lecture honors Andrew G. DuMez (1885-1948), who was dean of the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy for 22 years. Current dean Natalie D. Eddington, PhD, FAAPS, said DuMez raised the standards of pharmaceutical education and served as an officer of the American Council on Pharmaceutical Education and president of both the American Pharmaceutical Association and the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy.
Clancy was appointed director of AHRQ in 2003 and was reappointed in 2009. Previously she was director of the agency’s Center for Outcomes and Effectiveness Research. She is a graduate of Boston College and the University of Massachusetts Medical School. As AHRQ director, she launched the first annual report to Congress on health care disparities and health care quality.