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Practice-Based Research Networks: Asphalt on the Blue Highways of Primary Care Research

Don Nease, MD, and Jack Westfall, MD, MPH/MSPH in the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.

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by Liz Campbell | December 5, 2024
Hands hovering over charts and graphs.

Don Nease, MD, and Jack Westfall, MD, MPH/MSPH, working as consultants with Dartmouth and the Northern New England CO-OP (one of the oldest PBRNs in the country) helped co-author "Practice-Based Research Networks: Asphalt on the Blue Highways of Primary Care Research" which is part of a series of papers arising from the Family Medicine Research Summit that preceded last year’s North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG) conference.

From the Publication: In response to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Roadmap 2 decades ago,1 “Blue Highways” was used as a metaphor describing the need to create and translate evidence to and from practices and communities where most individuals live and seek medical care.2 Practice-based research was identified as a key method and infrastructure needed to support the Roadmap’s translational aspirations. Practice-based research networks (PBRNs) might be thought of as the “asphalt” paving the roads for essential practice and community-based engagement. T3 translation, or translation into real world practice, quickly became a common part of the NIH Roadmap and subsequent Clinical Translational Science Awards.

PBRNs grew out of the counterculture ethos present during the birth of Family Medicine in the 1970s as a reaction to the promulgation of recommendations and guidelines derived from the highly selective denominator of academic health care centers. 

Read more about this work in the publication

Don Nease and Jack Westfall

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