2007
DOI: 10.1177/00333549071220s214
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Project ECHO: Linking University Specialists with Rural and Prison-Based Clinicians to Improve Care for People with Chronic Hepatitis C in New Mexico

Abstract: Project Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (Project ECHO) is a telemedicine and distance-learning program designed to improve access to quality health care for New Mexicans with hepatitis C. Project ECHO links health-care providers from rural clinics, the Indian Health Service, and prisons with specialists at the University of New Mexico. At weekly clinics, partners present and discuss patients with hepatitis C with specialists. Partners can receive continuing education credits for participating. Sinc… Show more

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Cited by 166 publications
(148 citation statements)
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“…The VHA is implementing a new model of telemedicine care, based on New Mexico's Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) telemedicine program that would consolidate liver telemedicine care into one provider to provider visit [42][43][44]. The model is based on case-based learning like a tumor board conference whereby primary care providers dialing in from multiple outpatient clinics present a patient's case to the specialists and discuss options for management.…”
Section: Case Study: Application Of the Hybrid Conceptual Framework Cmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The VHA is implementing a new model of telemedicine care, based on New Mexico's Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) telemedicine program that would consolidate liver telemedicine care into one provider to provider visit [42][43][44]. The model is based on case-based learning like a tumor board conference whereby primary care providers dialing in from multiple outpatient clinics present a patient's case to the specialists and discuss options for management.…”
Section: Case Study: Application Of the Hybrid Conceptual Framework Cmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the Project SCAN-ECHO requires collaboration between primary and specialty care, in which the specialist is "mentoring" primary care physicians on HCV management, context exploration could determine important characteristics of the mentoring specialist which facilitated a collaborative and team-based approach. Borrowing lessons learned from the contextual elements of the New Mexico-based Project SCAN-ECHO could include terming specialty and primary care coordinated care as "learning loops" or "collaborative groups" to reinforce the team-based, dialectical approach to care [43,44]. Contextual assessment would strongly influence the early processes of implementation by simultaneously developing the optimal organizational and clinical environment for the intervention and tailoring the intervention with the contextual environment.…”
Section: Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Project ECHO was launched in 2004 in 32 rural, underserved New Mexico counties. 16 Its aim is to educate PCPs using specialist-led, case-based learning to increase PCPs' knowledge about cases that were traditionally handled by specialists. Group sessions with providers are held via Internet teleconference twice monthly to discuss patient cases and ultimately guide clinical decision-making.…”
Section: Transfer Of Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…30,32,35 This supplement includes viewpoints and commentaries that address many of these barriers and challenges, including (1) access to and models for care of people identified with positive anti-HCV test results in the public sector; 42,43 (2) vaccination of high-risk adults; 29 and (3) data systems and other infrastructure barriers, such as categorical funding. 24,41 In addition, CDC describes progress in bringing together related prevention programs on a national level and promoting a comprehensive approach to prevention of HIV, STD, and viral hepatitis; 24 and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) describes several new federal programs to advance integration of viral hepatitis prevention into drug treatment programs.…”
Section: Barriers and Challengesmentioning
confidence: 99%