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Creating a provincial post COVID-19 interdisciplinary clinical care network as a learning health system during the pandemic: Integrating clinical care and research.
Levin, Adeera; Malbeuf, Michelle; Hoens, Alison M; Carlsten, Christopher; Ryerson, Christopher J; Cau, Alessandro; Bryan, Stirling; Robinson, Jaclyn; Tarling, Tamsin; Shum, Joanne; Lavallee, Danielle C.
  • Levin A; Division of Nephrology University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Malbeuf M; Provincial Health Services Authority Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Hoens AM; Department of Medicine University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Carlsten C; Provincial Health Services Authority Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Ryerson CJ; Providence Health Care Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Cau A; Michael Smith Health Research BC Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Bryan S; Department of Physical Therapy University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Robinson J; Arthritis Research Canada Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Tarling T; Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Evaluation Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Shum J; Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences St. Paul's Hospital Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Lavallee DC; Department of Medicine University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
Learn Health Syst ; : e10316, 2022 May 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2242619
ABSTRACT

Introduction:

Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) affects multiple organ systems in the acute phase and also has long-term sequelae. Research on the long-term impacts of COVID-19 is limited. The Post COVID-19 Interdisciplinary Clinical Care Network (PC-ICCN), conceived in July 2020, is a provincially funded resource that is modelled as a Learning Health System (LHS), focused on those people with persistent symptoms post COVID-19 infection.

Methods:

The PC-ICCN emerged through collaboration among over 60 clinical specialists, researchers, patients, and health administrators. At the core of the network are the post COVID-19 Recovery Clinics (PCRCs), which provide direct patient care that includes standardized testing and education at regular follow-up intervals for a minimum of 12 months post enrolment. The PC-ICCN patient registry captures data on all COVID-19 patients with confirmed infection, by laboratory testing or epi-linkage, who have been referred to one of five post COVID-19 Recovery Clinics at the time of referral, with data stored in a fully encrypted Oracle-based provincial database. The PC-ICCN has centralized administrative and operational oversight, multi-stakeholder governance, purpose built data collection supported through clinical operations geographically dispersed across the province, and research operations including data analytics.

Results:

To date, 5364 patients have been referred, with an increasing number and capacity of these clinics, and 2354 people have had at least one clinic visit. Since inception, the PC-ICCN has received over 30 research proposal requests. This is aligned with the goal of creating infrastructure to support a wide variety of research to improve care and outcomes for patients experiencing long-term symptoms following COVID-19 infection.

Conclusions:

The PC-ICCN is a first-in-kind initiative in British Columbia to enhance knowledge and understanding of the sequelae of COVID-19 infection over time. This provincial initiative serves as a model for other national and international endeavors to enable care as research and research as care.
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Texto completo: Disponible Colección: Bases de datos internacionales Base de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Estudio de cohorte / Estudio pronóstico Tópicos: Covid persistente Idioma: Inglés Revista: Learn Health Syst Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Artículo

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Texto completo: Disponible Colección: Bases de datos internacionales Base de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Estudio de cohorte / Estudio pronóstico Tópicos: Covid persistente Idioma: Inglés Revista: Learn Health Syst Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Artículo