| Literature DB >> 31466526 |
Carissa Bonner1, Michael Anthony Fajardo2, Jenny Doust3, Kirsten McCaffery2, Lyndal Trevena2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention guidelines based on absolute risk assessment is poor around the world, including Australia. Behavioural barriers amongst GPs and patients include capability (e.g. difficulty communicating/understanding risk) and motivation (e.g. attitudes towards guidelines/medication). This paper outlines the theory-based development of a website for GP guidelines, and piloting of a new risk calculator/decision aid.Entities:
Keywords: Audit and feedback; Behaviour change; Cardiovascular disease; Decision aids; Evidence-based medicine; Primary care; Risk assessment; Risk communication; Shared decision making
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31466526 PMCID: PMC6716813 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-019-0927-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Healthy Heart Study findings
| Study description | Implications | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | GP interviews about CVD risk assessment and management [ | GPs use a range of CVD risk assessment strategies, and identified capability (knowledge, communication) opportunity (access, time) and motivation (habit, concerns about applicability of guidelines to certain patients) as key barriers to absolute risk assessment |
| 2 | Patient interviews about CVD risk assessment and management [ | Patient and GP decision making about CVD risk management is influenced by perceived risk and attitudes rather than calculated absolute risk of a CVD event |
| 3 | GP experiment to explore relative influence of absolute risk vs blood pressure/cholesterol on prescribing [ | Providing an absolute CVD risk assessment is not sufficient to overcome GPs’ tendency to prescribe medication based on blood pressure/cholesterol alone |
| 4 | Patient “think aloud” study using heart age calculators [ | Heart age calculators prompted emotional reactions and consideration of lifestyle changes, but unexpected ‘older’ heart age results were not believable |
| 5 | Patient experiment testing heart age versus 5-year absolute CVD risk [ | Heart age is easier to recall but also inflates risk perception and is less credible than 5-year absolute CVD risk, with no advantage for lifestyle change intentions |
| 6 | Patient “think aloud” study using absolute risk calculators [ | Absolute CVD risk is more meaningful when provided alongside a verbal description of the risk category and graphical displays of intervention effects for both lifestyle and medication |
| 7 | Systematic review of existing CVD risk calculators [ | There were 73 CVD risk calculators available online, but none matched Australian guidelines and they were not suitable for people with lower health literacy |
| 8 | Systematic review of CVD decision aids [ | There were 25 CVD decision aids available online, but none matched Australian guidelines, few presented both lifestyle and medication options in a balanced way, and they were not suitable for people with lower health literacy |
Summary of conclusions from the Behaviour Change Wheel framework process
| Intervention functions | Behavioural components served by intervention functions | Behaviour change techniques (BCTs) to deliver intervention functions | Policy categories through which BCTs can be delivered | Intervention strategy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
• Education • Training • Persuasion | • Psychological capability (understanding role of risk factors, risk communication) [ • Physical opportunity (access to updated evidence on risk/benefit in line with Australian guidelines) [ • Reflective motivation (attitude towards using guidelines for perceived low/high risk cases) [ | • Information about health consequences • Feedback on behaviour • Instruction on how to perform a behaviour • Action planning • Social comparison | • Guidelines | Online version of guidelines to enable national access, linked to: • 5-year risk calculator that integrates assessment and management guidelines including clear role of risk factors • Updated evidence on benefits and harms for medication + lifestyle options • Decision aid for patients to improve communication • Hypothetical patient cases with feedback as part of audit and feedback training exercise [based on existing resources] |
Fig. 1Patient risk calculator and decision aid
Fig. 2GP audit and feedback exercise
Fig. 3Summary of intervention development and testing
Website development based on iterative user feedback
| Development stage | Example user feedback | Major changes made |
|---|---|---|
| Stage 1: Intervention development based on Behaviour Change Wheel process | Healthy Heart Study GP interview: ‘The calculator of course doesn’t include certain factors…if someone does do a lot of exercise I would…think their risk is probably lower.’ [ Healthy Heart Study patient interview: ‘The visual presentation of the result…because it’s a picture instead of numeric, I think I’ll take more interest…when you see red and green…that seems to have more of a impact on me, you know…the numbers don’t, you know?’ [ | • Develop new risk calculator to more clearly explain risk factor roles in assessment versus management guidelines (psychological capability), supported by links to existing audit and feedback strategies (reflective motivation) • Link risk calculator to patient decision aid with colour coded icon arrays to help GPs explain probability of CVD event to patients (psychological capability) and access up-to-date intervention effects on their risk (physical opportunity) |
| Stage 2: Co-design of content with GPs | GP focus group: “Is it possible you need to quote something along the lines of ‘no evidence regarding dose or exact dose’ or something? Cos patients ask you a lot of ‘how much should I take?’… It could be good with a bit of extra information and a little bit more about the doses and the side effects and costs and so on” | • Less statistical information and more practical issues for GP evidence summaries • Include complementary and alternative medicine options to show lack of effect on CVD outcomes |
| Stage 3: GP conference feedback on prototype website | GP conference feedback: ‘Improved diet’ is very vague and after all, the benefit is only with the Mediterranean diet and has not been shown with other ‘improved diets’. GP interview: ‘So are there explanations…for alcohol, you want to put what moderate means...it’s not going to calculate BMI for you?’ | • Rewording risk factors and interventions to be clearer • Automatic calculation of body mass index and risky drinking • Changed icon array shades to cater to vision impairments and black/white printing |
| Stage 4a: GP and patient interview feedback on functional website | GP interview: ‘It’s directed towards the risk factor they’ve actually identified?... I think this is really good the summary… it’s really comprehensive…let’s not waste any time talking at length about smoking if you’re not even considering it…whereas what about your diet… oh yes I’m keen to know about that’ Patient interview: ‘With the button where it says print…it automatically comes up with the print page ahead of viewing it, so maybe it’s better to view it first and have the option to print later so you don’t have to print it’ | • Add print button for 2 page summary of single intervention selected by GP • View decision aid information in separate tab before printing • Change summary table in full 9 option decision aid to more clearly show effects on risk |
| Stage 4b: GP and patient interview feedback on final website at | GP interview: ‘The patient would be given an ipad…give it to the nurse or hand it back to reception…doing the AUSDIAB [diabetes risk assessment] at reception was really good…enter it on the patient file…if it was high then I would need know’ Patient interview: ‘I have to talk to the doctor about the cholesterol lowering medication, and blood pressure and aspirin…I can take this [decision aid] with me next time I go to see her’ | • No further changes made to GP website or linked resources • Implementation suggestions still need to be addressed: 1. Auto-population of risk factors from patients’ electronic record; 2. Low health literacy version of decision aid; 3. Pre-consultation access to risk calculator/decision aid |
| Stage 5: Feasibility study with GPs using final website over 1 month | GP open response comments reflecting key implementation issues: ‘If it could be somehow linked to practice software so I remember to do it and the values are prefilled that would be ideal.’ ‘Needs to have some in different languages to show people outcomes for those with poor English understanding.’ ‘More time to be scheduled to counsel patients on lifestyle modification and CVD risk calculator use.’ | • Feedback generally positive with some contrasting views on format preferences • Confirmed implementation issues identified in stage 4b: 1. Auto-population of risk factors from patients’ electronic record 2. Low health literacy version of decision aid; 3. Pre-consultation access to risk calculator/decision aid |
Feasibility study participant characteristics
| Characteristics | Final sample ( |
|---|---|
| Age (mean) | 52.6 years (SD 8.57) |
| Experience as GP (mean) | 28.0 years (SD 8.98) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 67 (68%) |
| Female | 30 (31%) |
| Other/prefer not to say | 1 (1%) |
| Australian state/territory | |
| New South Wales | 31 (32%) |
| Victoria | 28 (29%) |
| Queensland | 22 (22%) |
| Western Australia | 4 (4%) |
| Tasmania | 2 (2%) |
| Northern Territory | 1 (1%) |
| Australian Capital Territory | 1 (1%) |
Correct risk category and medication recommendation before and after using the website
| Selected case | Before using risk calculator | After using risk calculator |
|---|---|---|
| Low risk ( | Correct risk category: 70% | Correct risk category: 87% |
| Likely/very likely to prescribe any meds: 19% | Blood pressure med recommended: 22% | |
| Cholesterol med recommended: 22% | ||
| Moderate risk ( | Correct risk category: 58% | Correct risk category: 90% |
| Likely/very likely to prescribe any meds: 74% | Blood pressure med recommended: 32% | |
| Cholesterol med recommended: 42% | ||
| High risk ( | Correct risk category: 26% | Correct risk category: 76% |
| Likely/very likely to prescribe any meds: 57% | Blood pressure med recommended: 71% | |
| Cholesterol med recommended: 83% |
Note: see Additional file 1 for details of the 9 hypothetical patient cases (3 per risk category; randomised order in survey and also presented in the audit and feedback section of website; developed from Healthy Heart Study GP interviews that identified situations where absolute risk assessment/communication is most challenging [16, 17])
Fig. 4Correct identification of risk category for low, moderate and high risk patient cases