Summary of the Multilevel Interventions in Health Care Conference
Open Access
- 1 May 2012
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in JNCI Monographs
- Vol. 2012 (44) , 123-126
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jncimonographs/lgs018
Abstract
Patient outcomes are a primary measure by which we assess health-care delivery quality. Those outcomes are influenced by numerous other factors in the multilevel context of care described in this monograph (1). Factors include policies that enable or impede health-care access, social support from friends and family, processes of health-care teams, organizational procedures in settings where care is delivered, and the environmental context where these behaviors occur. A few years ago, an internal team of researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI) within the Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences recognized the importance of studying the context in which health care is received to intervene on multiple levels of influence. However, the science of multilevel interventions was in an early stage of development. Thus, the NCI researchers (henceforth “the NCI planning team”) reached out to the extramural community to identify expertise that would help advance this science. The collaborations led to a set of draft articles presented at a conference titled Multilevel Interventions in Health Care: Building a Foundation for Future Research (Las Vegas, NV, March 4–5, 2011). Comments from that conference led to the final articles presented in this issue.Keywords
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