Jun 3

Past Event

Using Comparative Effectiveness Research to Improve the Health of Priority Populations

Audio

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Summary

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act made a significant investment in comparative effectiveness research (CER), a promising tool for determining the most effective strategies for treating different patients. Yet certain populations – including racial and ethnic minorities, the elderly, children, people with disabilities and those with multiple chronic conditions – are often underrepresented in health care research and therefore may not realize the same benefit from CER as the general population. To effectively reduce health care disparities and improve the quality and value of care for all patients, CER must address the needs of these priority populations.

NOTE: The audio for the keynote address is truncated at the very beginning, due to technical difficulties.

On June 3, the Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform at Brookings hosted a forum to identify challenges and opportunities for using CER to improve the health of priority populations. Experts and key stakeholders discussed methods for setting research priorities that can improve care, examined infrastructure needs for conducting research and addressed specific barriers to getting from better evidence to better care – all with specific focus on these priority groups.

After each panel, participants took audience questions.

Details

June 3, 2010

9:00 AM - 12:30 PM EDT

JW Marriott Hotel

1331 Pennsylvania Ave, NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • Welcome and Introductory Remarks

  • Keynote Address

    • Carolyn Clancy

      Director, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

  • Panel 1: Setting Research Priorities that Improve Care for Vulnerable Populations

    • mmclellanimage

      Moderator: Mark McClellan

      Director, Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform

      Economic Studies

    • Garth Graham

      Director, Office of Minority Health

      U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

    • Richard Hodes

      Director, National Institute on Aging

    • Lisa Iezzoni

      Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Mongan Institute for Health Policy

      Massachusetts General Hospital

    • Nancy Roizen

      Professor of Pediatrics and Chief, Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics and Psychology

      Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital

  • Panel 2: Expanding Infrastructure and Capacity for Conducting CER in Priority Populations

    • mmclellanimage

      Moderator: Mark McClellan

      Director, Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform

      Economic Studies

    • Joel Kupersmith

      Chief Research and Development Officer

      Veterans Health Administration

    • Ruth Brannon

      Director, Division of Research Sciences, National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research

      U.S. Department of Education

    • Newell McElwee

      Executive Director, U.S. Outcomes Research Group

      Merck & Co., Inc.

    • Ruth Shaber

      Medical Director

      Kaiser Permanente Care Management Institute

    • Philip Wang

      Deputy Director

      National Institute of Mental Health

  • Panel 3: Using Evidence to Improve Care for Priority Populations

    • mmclellanimage

      Moderator: Mark McClellan

      Director, Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform

      Economic Studies

    • Michael Cropp

      President and Chief Executive Officer

      Independent Health

    • Jean D. Moody-Williams

      Group Director, Quality Improvement Group

      Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

    • Margaret K. O’Bryon

      President and Chief Executive Officer

      Consumer Health Foundation

    • Gretchen Clark Wartman

      Vice President, Policy and Program

      National Minority Quality Forum

    • Elena Rios

      President and Chief Executive Officer

      National Hispanic Medical Association

  • Closing Remarks