Impossible Politics? PCORI and the Search for Publicly Funded Comparative Effectiveness Research in the United States

Congress created the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) to fund comparative effectiveness research without encroaching on health care decision making in the private sector. This study asked if the organization's design is sufficient to insulate it from the hostile political en...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of health politics, policy and law policy and law, 2019-04, Vol.44 (2), p.221-265
Hauptverfasser: Keller, Ann C., Flagg, Robin, Keller, Justin, Ravi, Suhasini
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container_issue 2
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container_title Journal of health politics, policy and law
container_volume 44
creator Keller, Ann C.
Flagg, Robin
Keller, Justin
Ravi, Suhasini
description Congress created the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) to fund comparative effectiveness research without encroaching on health care decision making in the private sector. This study asked if the organization's design is sufficient to insulate it from the hostile political environment that accompanied past comparative effectiveness research efforts. Data for the study came from key informant interviews, stakeholder interviews, content analysis of public comments, congressional hearings, and media and Internet content about PCORI. Drawing on theoretical frameworks of interest group behavior, the study assessed current and potential future stakeholder activity directed toward PCORI. The study found that PCORI's leadership has successfully mobilized patients and researchers in support of its mission. However, patient groups tend to mobilize within rather than across disease categories, limiting the collective impact these groups might have. Moreover, PCORI's success in including the patient voice in every stage of the research process has created only diffuse support for the organization. A lack of “practice-changing” findings—likely the result of the organization's interest group environment—leaves PCORI open to the criticism of ineffectiveness.
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source Political Science Complete; PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Clinical outcomes
Congressional hearings
Content analysis
Criticism
Decision making
Disease control
Effectiveness
Group dynamics
Health care
Health research
Health services
Interest groups
Internet
Interviews
Leadership
Legislatures
Mass media
Medical decision making
Medicine and Health
Organizational effectiveness
Patient-centered care
Patients
Political culture
Political Science
Politics
Private sector
Public Health and Health Policy
Public Policy
Stakeholders
title Impossible Politics? PCORI and the Search for Publicly Funded Comparative Effectiveness Research in the United States
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