@article{10.22454/PRiMER.2021.888918, author = {Kindratt, Tiffany and Day, Philip G. and Blower, Jessica and Yun, Olivia and Gimpel, Nora}, title = {Experiential QI Activity for Residents to Improve Women’s Preventive Services}, journal = {PRiMER}, volume = {5}, year = {2021}, month = {7}, doi = {10.22454/PRiMER.2021.888918}, abstract = {Introduction: The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) requires family medicine residents to complete a quality improvement (QI) project. There is a need for more QI training activities to be shared to meet this requirement. Our objective was to describe an activity for residents to improve women’s preventive health services in an underserved clinic. Specific aims were to determine: (1) how women’s receipt of preventive services compared to benchmarks, (2) physician and staff knowledge of the process and barriers to receiving services, and (3) whether an intervention to increase awareness among physicians and staff improved preventive services. Methods: Residents (N=30) evaluated charts (N=505) to determine receipt of mammograms, pap tests, colon cancer screenings, and pneumonia vaccines. We compared estimates to existing clinic benchmarks. We presented initial (preintervention) results to physicians and staff at clinic team meetings. We collected perceptions of processes and barriers to preventive services. Preintervention methods were replicated (N=100) and results were compared (postintervention). Results: Preintervention, mammograms (72%) and Pap tests (65%) were lower than clinic benchmarks. Most (81%) women ages 65 and older received a pneumonia vaccine; however, this was lower than the national Healthy People 2020 goal. Fear, knowledge, and scheduling were identified as top barriers. Post-intervention, there was a statistically significant increase in Pap tests (P=.0013). Conclusion: This activity trained residents how to impact their practice through QI methods and can be used in other programs as a foundation for developing basic QI initiatives. Future efforts should focus on evaluating barriers to preventive services from the patient perspective.}, URL = {https://journals.stfm.org//primer/2021/kindratt-2021-0010/}, eprint = {https://journals.stfm.org//media/4224/primer-5-25.pdf}, }