| Literature DB >> 30820339 |
Sara Kuppin Chokshi1, Hayley M Belli1, Andrea B Troxel1, Saul Blecker1, Caroline Blaum1, Paul Testa1, Devin Mann1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current guidelines recommend less aggressive target hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels based on older age and lower life expectancy for older adults with diabetes. The effectiveness of electronic health record (EHR) clinical decision support (CDS) in promoting guideline adherence is undermined by alert fatigue and poor workflow integration. Integrating behavioral economics (BE) and CDS tools is a novel approach to improving adherence to guidelines while minimizing clinician burden.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral economics; Clinical decision support; Diabetes; Electronic health records
Year: 2019 PMID: 30820339 PMCID: PMC6381676 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-019-0403-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Fig. 1Process model for user-centered digital development
Behavioral economic strategies and associated module opportunity examples
| BE strategy | Module opportunity | Utilization measure |
|---|---|---|
| Suggest alternatives [ | Alert suggests metformin when trying to prescribe other diabetes medication in CW eligible patient | Percentage of eligible alerts where alternative is selected |
| Accountable justification [ | Subcomponent of alert asking for justification if prescribing diabetes medication other than metformin | Percentage of eligible alerts where justification is provided (vs. only “clicked through”) |
| Defaults [ | Default all diabetes management order sets to suggest metformin in eligible patients | Percentage of order sets where clinician changes the default option |
| Anchoring [ | Update HbA1c lab reports for CW eligible patients to show less aggressive treatment goals | Qualitative feedback and percentage of CW compliant patients pre- and post implementation update |
| Peer comparisons/norming [ | Modify clinician quality and safety dashboard to visualize diabetes management peer comparisons with color codes to indicate relative performance | Number of views of the peer comparison dashboard |
| Availability bias [ | Medication preference list prioritizes metformin | Number of prescriptions for metformin initiated from preference list |
Possible research methods for user testing
| User testing methods | Description | Predicted frequency and time point |
|---|---|---|
| Key informant interviews | Semi-structured interviews with individual or small group (2–3) experts in primary care, geriatrics, EHR, diabetes, and other relevant fields | 6–8 informants, 1–2 interviews each |
| Group interviews | Semi-structured interviews with groups of 4–6 clinicians | Pre- and post vanguard |
| “Ride along” observation | Individual observation session of clinician interaction with EHR real time, in situ | 6–8 sessions per vanguard and pilot |
| Think-aloud usability testing [ | Individual observations in “lab” of clinicians verbalizing all thoughts as they interact with the module following a carefully scripted series of EHR tasks | 4–6 observations as needed in pilot |
| Near live [ | Individual observations in “lab” of clinicians interacting with simulated data and patient actors to realistically model clinical use of module | 4–6 observations as needed in pilot |
| Live [ | Individual observations of clinicians in situ using the tool in actual patient care | 3 observations as needed in pilot |
Patient population
| Primary care and endocrine practices (N) | 78 |
|---|---|
| Demographics | |
| % Black | 15 |
| % Hispanic | 43 |
| % Asian | 9 |
| % White | 25 |
| % Other | 8 |
| Patients ≥ 75 with diabetes | 5187 |
Choosing Wisely non-compliance categories
| Measured HbA1c | Patient category | Current prescription |
|---|---|---|
| < 7 | Healthy | Non-metformin agent |
| < 7 | Moderate comorbidity | Non-metformin agent |
| < 7 | Shorter life expectancy | Non-metformin agent |
| 7–7.5 | Moderate comorbidity | Non-metformin agent |
| 7–7.5 | Shorter life expectancy | Non-metformin agent |
| 7.5–8 | Shorter life expectancy | Non-metformin agent |