BACKGROUND: Coronary artery disease is the single leading cause of death in the United States, and medications can significantly reduce the rate of repeat cardiovascular events and treatment procedures. Adherence to these medications, however, is very low. METHODS: HeartStrong is a national randomized trial offering 3 innovations. First, the intervention is built on concepts from behavioral economics that we expect to enhance its effectiveness. Second, the implementation of the trial takes advantage of new technology, including wireless pill bottles and remote feedback, to substantially automate procedures. Third, the trial's design includes an enhancement of the standard randomized clinical trial that allows rapid-cycle innovation and ongoing program enhancement. RESULTS: Using a system involving direct data feeds from 6 insurance partners followed by mail, telephone, and email contact, we enrolled 1,509 patients discharged from the hospital with acute myocardial infarction in a 2:1 ratio of intervention:usual care. The intervention period lasts 1 year; the primary outcome is time to first fatal or nonfatal acute vascular event or revascularization, including acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina, stroke, acute coronary syndrome admission, or death. CONCLUSIONS: Our randomized controlled trial of the HeartStrong program will provide an evaluation of a state-of-the-art behavioral economic intervention with a number of important pragmatic features. These include a tailored intervention responding to patient activity, streamlining of consent and implementation processes using new technologies, outcomes centrally important to patients, and the ability to implement rapid-cycle innovation.
BACKGROUND: Coronary artery disease is the single leading cause of death in the United States, and medications can significantly reduce the rate of repeat cardiovascular events and treatment procedures. Adherence to these medications, however, is very low. METHODS: HeartStrong is a national randomized trial offering 3 innovations. First, the intervention is built on concepts from behavioral economics that we expect to enhance its effectiveness. Second, the implementation of the trial takes advantage of new technology, including wireless pill bottles and remote feedback, to substantially automate procedures. Third, the trial's design includes an enhancement of the standard randomized clinical trial that allows rapid-cycle innovation and ongoing program enhancement. RESULTS: Using a system involving direct data feeds from 6 insurance partners followed by mail, telephone, and email contact, we enrolled 1,509 patients discharged from the hospital with acute myocardial infarction in a 2:1 ratio of intervention:usual care. The intervention period lasts 1 year; the primary outcome is time to first fatal or nonfatal acute vascular event or revascularization, including acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina, stroke, acute coronary syndrome admission, or death. CONCLUSIONS: Our randomized controlled trial of the HeartStrong program will provide an evaluation of a state-of-the-art behavioral economic intervention with a number of important pragmatic features. These include a tailored intervention responding to patient activity, streamlining of consent and implementation processes using new technologies, outcomes centrally important to patients, and the ability to implement rapid-cycle innovation.
Authors: Kevin G Volpp; Andrea B Troxel; Shivan J Mehta; Laurie Norton; Jingsan Zhu; Raymond Lim; Wenli Wang; Noora Marcus; Christian Terwiesch; Kristen Caldarella; Tova Levin; Mike Relish; Nathan Negin; Aaron Smith-McLallen; Richard Snyder; Claire M Spettell; Brian Drachman; Daniel Kolansky; David A Asch Journal: JAMA Intern Med Date: 2017-08-01 Impact factor: 21.873
Authors: Colman H Humphrey; Dylan S Small; Shane T Jensen; Kevin G Volpp; David A Asch; Jingsan Zhu; Andrea B Troxel Journal: Stat Med Date: 2019-04-02 Impact factor: 2.373
Authors: Julie C Lauffenburger; Elad Yom-Tov; Punam A Keller; Marie E McDonnell; Lily G Bessette; Constance P Fontanet; Ellen S Sears; Erin Kim; Kaitlin Hanken; J Joseph Buckley; Renee A Barlev; Nancy Haff; Niteesh K Choudhry Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2021-12-03 Impact factor: 2.692
Authors: Constance P Fontanet; Niteesh K Choudhry; Wendy Wood; Ted Robertson; Nancy Haff; Rebecca Oran; Ellen S Sears; Erin Kim; Kaitlin Hanken; Renee A Barlev; Julie C Lauffenburger; Candace H Feldman Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2021-11-24 Impact factor: 2.692
Authors: Katharine Lawrence; Danissa V Rodriguez; Dawn M Feldthouse; Donna Shelley; Jonathan L Yu; Hayley M Belli; Javier Gonzalez; Sumaiya Tasneem; Jerlisa Fontaine; Lisa L Groom; Son Luu; Yinxiang Wu; Kathleen M McTigue; Bonny Rockette-Wagner; Devin M Mann Journal: JMIR Res Protoc Date: 2021-02-09