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Date: Wednesday, June 25, 1997
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: AHCPR Public Affairs Karen J. Migdail, (301) 594-1364 ext. ,1375(kmigdail@ahcpr.gov)

AHCPR Announces 12 Evidence-Based Practice Centers


HHS Secretary Donna E. Shalala today announced the start of a new program designed to help clinicians, providers, and health plans improve the quality of health care by giving them state-of-the-art scientific information on common, costly medical conditions and new health care technologies.

Under its Evidence-based Practice Program, HHS' Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) is awarding 12 five-year contracts to institutions in the United States and Canada to serve as Evidence-based Practice Centers (EPCs). The EPCs will review all the relevant scientific literature on medical topics assigned to them by AHCPR, and conduct additional analyses when appropriate.

Their findings will be produced as "evidence reports" or technology assessments, which AHCPR will disseminate widely through its site on the World Wide Web and as printed documents. The evidence reports will serve as the scientific foundation for public- and private-sector organizations to develop tools and strategies for improving the quality of health care services they provide and pay for. Technology assessments produced by the EPCs will give health plans and payers information they need to make informed decisions about covering new and changing medical devices and procedures.

"AHCPR's Evidence-based Practice Program, which includes the EPCs and the recently announced National Guideline Clearinghouse, will help clinicians, health plans and other providers make critical health care decisions using the best scientific knowledge available," said Secretary Shalala. "Our goal is to use the Internet and every other means of dissemination to ensure that this information is used to provide high quality health care services and achieve the best value for the money this nation spends on health care."

The EPCs will tackle specific topics within broad areas such as adult health, child and adolescent health, maternal health, geriatrics, rehabilitation, dental health, mental health and substance abuse, alternative care, and preventive care. The first set of topics, nominated by public- and private-sector organizations in response to a solicitation published by AHCPR in November 1996, will be announced this summer.

"The reports produced by the EPCs will have a significant impact on the quality of health care services by providing much-needed critical evaluations of the available scientific literature regarding clinical interventions and technologies," said John M. Eisenberg, M.D., AHCPR administrator. "This information will be invaluable not only to individual clinicians, health plans, providers and purchasers, but also to the health care system as a whole by providing important information to help reduce the unnecessary variations in medical practice."

To bring the broadest range of experts into the development of evidence reports and health technology assessment, the EPCs are encouraged to form partnerships and enter into collaborations with other medical and research organizations.

"AHCPR's Evidence-based Practice Centers will bring together the best of health services research to improve clinical practice and medical decisionmaking," said Douglas Kamerow, M.D., director of AHCPR's Office of the Forum for Quality and Effectiveness in Health Care. "The EPCs will work with partner organizations to ensure that the evidence reports and technology assessments they produce will become building blocks for health care quality improvement projects throughout the nation."

The following is a list of the AHCPR Evidence-based Practice Centers and the organizations with which they will collaborate: