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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF MARCH 21,2000 PSA#2561National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Contracts
Management Branch, 6100 Bldg., Suite 7A07, 6100- Executive Blvd MSC
7510, Bethesda, MD 20892-7510 A -- PREVENTING CHILDHOOD INJURIES IN PRIMARY PEDIATRIC CARE SOL
NICHD-00-02 DUE 042100 POC Lynn Salo: Contract Specialist (301)435-6962
WEB: NICHD Contract Office, http://www.nichd.nih.gov/oam_cmb/. E-MAIL:
Contact the NICHD Contract Specialist, nichdcmb@mail.nih.gov. The
NICHD is planning to award a contract to determine the feasibility of
conducting a randomized efficacy trial of the integration of injury
prevention intervention (on the provider and system levels) into
routine pediatric health care provided by community delivery sites. The
purpose of this announcement is to solicit potential contractual
sources for the feasibility study that meet the research,
organizational and experience requirements to perform the work.
Unintentional injuries are a leading cause of preventable death among
United States children. Medical visits related to preventable, nonfatal
injuries occur for approximately 25% of children (by age 3 years),
including 14.7% annually (in ages 1 to 4 years). These injuries cause
a high rate of child morbidity, including surgery, bed restriction
and/or loss of activity for one or more days. Community interventions
for household safety to prevent these injuries have made progress in
raising the awareness of parents, but these attempts show limited or no
effect on reducing hazards or injuries. Brief injury prevention
counseling by pediatric clinicians at routine medical care visits is
effective in improving the safety practices in US households with young
children and some evidence shows decreased injuries. Such counseling by
pediatricians appears to be cost-beneficial. The American Academy of
Pediatrics, American Academy of Family Physicians, and the United
States Preventive Services Task Force recommend including
age-appropriate injury prevention counseling in routine medical care of
infants, children, and adolescents. However, a low proportion of US
children receive injury prevention counseling from their health care
provider. The need exists for innovative interventions to reduce
personal and systems barriers that detract from the ability of
providers to deliver preventive care. The purpose of this study is to
determine the feasibility of introducing office-based interventions
compatible with current American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines and
coordinated aids to increase and improve injury prevention guidance in
primary care. The interventions will be on the systems level
[targeting providers, caretakers of children (ages newborn to 24
months) and office system]. The specific aims of this research are: (1)
develop a research-primary care partnership between the Contractor and
the delivery site(s) for development, implementation and pilot tests
of office-based injury prevention interventions and measurement of
intervention impact; (2) develop and execute system level demonstration
interventions based on AAP guidelines targeting parents of patients,
providers and the office system designed to promote the delivery of
injury prevention guidance; (3) determine the acceptability to
providers, extended staff and parents of patients of the demonstration
interventions; and (4) determine the immediate impact of the
demonstration interventions. A research-primary care partnership with
the pediatric delivery site(s) will be facilitated and maintained for
the duration of the study. Clinical and administrative staff and
parents of patients (ages newborn to 24 months) will be recruited for
participation (pediatric care providers, N = 8-12; parents of patients,
N=300). Key informant administrators and clinicians will be interviewed
for the formative work on intervention development. For the pilot
intervention assessments, parents and physicians will be exposed to one
or more demonstration interventions on the system level. They will be
interviewed prior to exposure and 3 weeks after exposure. The
feasibility outcomes are acceptability and immediate impact. Process
evaluations will be conducted: a) elements of the partnership between
the site(s) and the research staff for the duration of the study; and
b) intervention functioning during the pilot testing. In order to
obtain data that will provide a foundation for the efficacy study, the
Contractor must demonstrate the ability to access a defined community
delivery site for the feasibility research that reflects the service
delivery and organization requirements for the potential efficacy
trial. Collaborations between the health services research (e.g.,
university, academic health services research centers) and health care
delivery (e.g., Independent Practice Association managed-care type
groups, staff or group Health Maintenance Organization, Managed Care
Organization, Consortium of private pediatric care providers )are
encouraged. The Contractor and the delivery site(s) must have an active
collaboration on current health services and/or biobehavioral research.
The site(s) should demonstrate a strong commitment to preventive
pediatric care and promoting standardized delivery of injury prevention
services through system and resource supports. The contractor must
demonstrate the ability to implement and pilot test in the defined
delivery site(s) demonstration interventions on the system level that
target parents of patients, pediatric clinical staff and the office
system. In order to assure the successful conduct of the feasibility
study, the Contractor will be asked to develop a research-primary care
partnership for preventive services delivery and implementation of the
study interventions. This is not an announcement of RFP availability.
The purpose of this synopsis is to develop a list of potential sources
with the above qualifications to perform the work described.
Capability statements should be submitted to the following address by
April 28, 2000: Mrs. Lynn Salo, Contract Specialist, CMB, NICHD, NIH,
6100 Executive Boulevard, MSC 7510, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-7710
(Overnight courier: 6100 Executive Boulevard, Rockville, MD 20852).
Phone number: (301) 496-4611; FAX number: (301) 402-3676. Posted
03/17/00 (W-SN435601). (0077) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0012 20000321\A-0012.SOL)
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