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PCORI seeks comments on agenda

January 23, 2012 | Diana Manos, Senior Editor

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WASHINGTON – The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) has released for public comment a first draft of its national priorities for research and research agenda. The research requires the use of electronic health records, much in the way accountable care organizations use health data to improve care. The outcomes are conveyed to physicians electronically.

The agenda, released Monday, will be used to guide funding announcements for comparative clinical effectiveness research. PCORI is an independent, non-profit organization created by Congress in 2010. Its mission is to fund research that will provide patients, their caregivers and clinicians with the evidence-based information needed to make better-informed healthcare decisions.

[See also: Social media could 'accelerate clinical discovery'.]

“We want to hear from patients, caregivers, providers and the wider healthcare community on whether our draft priorities and initial research agenda capture the broad areas where more evidence-based information is needed to make better decisions,” said PCORI Board Chair Eugene Washington, MD. “This is a major milestone in our work as we continue to collaborate with all stakeholders and to build on the work of others for what we  expect will be the most patient-centered research agenda yet.”

The draft National Priorities for Research identifies five areas where comparative effectiveness research is needed to support decision-making, including:

  • assessment of options for prevention, diagnosis and treatment;
  • improving health care systems;
  • communication and dissemination research;
  • addressing disparities and
  • accelerating patient-centered outcomes research and methodological research.

These areas encompass the patient-centered research that PCORI intends to fund and are inclusive of all diseases and health conditions, leaders of the group said.

 [See also: NEHI outlines national plan for comparative effectiveness research.]

“These priorities and agenda give a framework to and identify the broad questions that must be addressed so that patients can make better and more personalized decisions in partnership with their clinicians across all areas of health,” said PCORI executive director Joe Selby, MD. “This initial agenda does not limit which conditions or treatments will be studied. It is a starting point.”

“We will be asking the community to think boldly about research projects across all five priority areas,” he said. The public comment period will remain open until 11:59 p.m. EST on March 15.

PCORI will hold a national forum on February 27 in Washington, D.C. The forum will be webcast, and individuals will be able to participate remotely through a teleconference.

PCORI encourages individuals to comment on its agenda online here. 

Follow Diana Manos on Twitter @DManos_IT_News.

Diana Manos
Senior Editor for Healthcare IT News
Follow Diana on Twitter @DManos_IT_News
Related Topics:
  • Centered Outcomes Research Institute
  • Eugene Washington
  • Social media
  • Electronic Health Records
  • Quality and Safety

Reader Comments (1)Login to Post a Comment

DoubleFixed says: Cut Bureaucrats, Not Health Care
January 24, 2012 | 2:26PM GMT

Kaiser Permanente dominates PCORI. Kaiser's Research Director, Joe Selby MD is its Executive Director. Sharon Levine MD is on its Board of Governors. CEO George Halvorson had unfettered special access to the White House in stealth sessions during the health reform process with Ezekiel Emanuel MD, Obama's Dr. Death.
http://www.hmohardball.com/Death%20Panel%20Birth%20&%20Attachments%201st...
Kaiser Permanente invented the drive-by delivery and harmed thousands of patients by forcing them into the HMO's in-house kidney transplant program. Kaiser appointment clerks were paid bonuses not to give patients appointments. Kaiser's Emergency Room had a policy to keep patients waiting until they left without care.
Drs. Selby and Levine and Mr. Halvorson demonstrate an inhumane pattern and practice to intentionally harm patients to make money to enrich the HMO and themselves. Mr. Halvorson's unfeeling reply at the Commonwealth Club: "We screwed up." Kaiser Permanente’s love for patients means never having to say the HMO is sorry.
PCORI's $3 billion government-subsidized budget means that Kaiser can screw up the lives of all plain folks Americans

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