Using ECHO Clinics to Promote Capacity Building in Clinical Supervision

American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Michael J ChapleSusan Garrett

Abstract

Project Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO™) is a hub-and-spoke knowledge-sharing network, led by expert teams who use multipoint videoconferencing to conduct virtual clinics with community providers in order to improve the quality of care. For this project, members of the Addiction Technology Transfer Center network applied this model in order to enhance workforce capacity to deliver clinical supervision for the treatment of substance use disorders. Clinical supervisors (n=66) employed in substance use disorder treatment programs were recruited to participate in this pilot study. The virtual ECHO clinic consisted of 12 total sessions, each lasting 1 hour and comprising a 15-minute mini-lecture on a clinical supervision topic and a 45-minute case presentation and review. All data were collected and analyzed between September 2016 and June 2017. Forty-eight staff attended at least one ECHO session (mean=6.38) and results are presented for 20 staff who completed the follow-up survey. Participants were highly satisfied with the overall intervention, organization of the clinic and the facilitation of Hub experts, relevance of the technical assistance to their work, and with the impact of the intervention on their eff...Continue Reading

Citations

Sep 6, 2019·Journal of General Internal Medicine·Ryan K McBainShira H Fischer
Jul 15, 2020·BMC Medical Education·Kavitha DhanasekaranRoopa Hariprasad
May 3, 2020·Pediatrics·Camille A Robinson, J Deanna Wilson

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