Mili Mehta1, Joshua Veith1,2, Stephanie Szymanski3, Vanessa Madden3, Joanna Lee Hart1,2,3,4,5, Meeta Prasad Kerlin1,2,3,4. 1. Department of Medicine. 2. Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Division, and. 3. Palliative and Advanced Illness Research Center, Department of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and. 4. Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics, and. 5. Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Abstract
Rationale: Lung-protective ventilation (LPV) improves outcomes in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and has also shown benefits in patients without ARDS. Despite this evidence, LPV use remains low. Objectives: To understand clinicians' perceptions of using behavioral economic strategies to improve rates of LPV use. Methods: We conducted semistructured interviews of clinicians across seven intensive care units within a university health system. We purposefully sampled clinicians of different professional backgrounds and experience levels. Each interview included descriptions of three of five strategies grounded in behavioral economic theory designed to facilitate clinicians' use of LPV: 1) an order set autopopulated with LPV settings ("default"), 2) an order set providing a choice between autopopulated LPV settings and open-ended order entry for alternative settings ("active choice"), 3) requirement of written justification if settings other than LPV were ordered or documented ("accountable justification"), 4) automated ARDS identification and clinician prompting ("alert"), and 5) provision of clinicians' and their peers' individual rates of LPV use ("peer comparison"). Descriptions were followed by open-ended questions to elicit perceptions about advantages, disadvantages, and acceptability. Initial interview transcripts were reviewed by two investigators to develop a thematic codebook, which was refined iteratively with the use of constant comparative methods. Results: We completed 17 interviews of physicians, nurse practitioners, and respiratory therapists. Strategies that prepopulated settings (default, active choice, and accountable justification) were perceived as providing benefit by reducing workloads and serving as cognitive prompts. The default and active choice strategies were more acceptable than accountable justification, which was perceived as potentially frustrating due to workflow impedance. The alert strategy was met with concerns about alert accuracy and alarm fatigue. The peer comparison strategy led to concerns about timing and fear of punitive measures. Participants believed that the default and active choice strategies would be highly acceptable, whereas few interviewees thought the alert would be acceptable. The active choice strategy was most consistently identified as potentially highly effective.Conclusions: Behavioral economic strategies have great potential as acceptable and potentially effective strategies to increase the use of LPV.
Rationale: Lung-protective ventilation (LPV) improves outcomes in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and has also shown benefits in patients without ARDS. Despite this evidence, LPV use remains low. Objectives: To understand clinicians' perceptions of using behavioral economic strategies to improve rates of LPV use. Methods: We conducted semistructured interviews of clinicians across seven intensive care units within a university health system. We purposefully sampled clinicians of different professional backgrounds and experience levels. Each interview included descriptions of three of five strategies grounded in behavioral economic theory designed to facilitate clinicians' use of LPV: 1) an order set autopopulated with LPV settings ("default"), 2) an order set providing a choice between autopopulated LPV settings and open-ended order entry for alternative settings ("active choice"), 3) requirement of written justification if settings other than LPV were ordered or documented ("accountable justification"), 4) automated ARDS identification and clinician prompting ("alert"), and 5) provision of clinicians' and their peers' individual rates of LPV use ("peer comparison"). Descriptions were followed by open-ended questions to elicit perceptions about advantages, disadvantages, and acceptability. Initial interview transcripts were reviewed by two investigators to develop a thematic codebook, which was refined iteratively with the use of constant comparative methods. Results: We completed 17 interviews of physicians, nurse practitioners, and respiratory therapists. Strategies that prepopulated settings (default, active choice, and accountable justification) were perceived as providing benefit by reducing workloads and serving as cognitive prompts. The default and active choice strategies were more acceptable than accountable justification, which was perceived as potentially frustrating due to workflow impedance. The alert strategy was met with concerns about alert accuracy and alarm fatigue. The peer comparison strategy led to concerns about timing and fear of punitive measures. Participants believed that the default and active choice strategies would be highly acceptable, whereas few interviewees thought the alert would be acceptable. The active choice strategy was most consistently identified as potentially highly effective.Conclusions: Behavioral economic strategies have great potential as acceptable and potentially effective strategies to increase the use of LPV.
Authors: Giacomo Bellani; John G Laffey; Tài Pham; Eddy Fan; Laurent Brochard; Andres Esteban; Luciano Gattinoni; Frank van Haren; Anders Larsson; Daniel F McAuley; Marco Ranieri; Gordon Rubenfeld; B Taylor Thompson; Hermann Wrigge; Arthur S Slutsky; Antonio Pesenti Journal: JAMA Date: 2016-02-23 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: Mitesh S Patel; Susan C Day; Scott D Halpern; C William Hanson; Joseph R Martinez; Steven Honeywell; Kevin G Volpp Journal: JAMA Intern Med Date: 2016-06-01 Impact factor: 21.873
Authors: Roy G Brower; Michael A Matthay; Alan Morris; David Schoenfeld; B Taylor Thompson; Arthur Wheeler Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2000-05-04 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Ravi Kalhan; Mark Mikkelsen; Pali Dedhiya; Jason Christie; Christine Gaughan; Paul N Lanken; Barbara Finkel; Robert Gallop; Barry D Fuchs Journal: Crit Care Med Date: 2006-02 Impact factor: 7.598
Authors: Richard H Kallet; Robert M Jasmer; Jean-Francois Pittet; Julin F Tang; Andre R Campbell; Rochelle Dicker; Claude Hemphill; John M Luce Journal: Crit Care Med Date: 2005-05 Impact factor: 7.598
Authors: Saeid Eslami; Ameen Abu-Hanna; Marcus J Schultz; Evert de Jonge; Nicolette F de Keizer Journal: J Crit Care Date: 2011-12-14 Impact factor: 3.425
Authors: Saeid Eslami; Nicolette F de Keizer; Ameen Abu-Hanna; Evert de Jonge; Marcus J Schultz Journal: J Crit Care Date: 2009-02-20 Impact factor: 3.425
Authors: Gordon D Rubenfeld; Claudette Cooper; Greg Carter; B Taylor Thompson; Leonard D Hudson Journal: Crit Care Med Date: 2004-06 Impact factor: 7.598
Authors: Eddy Fan; Lorenzo Del Sorbo; Ewan C Goligher; Carol L Hodgson; Laveena Munshi; Allan J Walkey; Neill K J Adhikari; Marcelo B P Amato; Richard Branson; Roy G Brower; Niall D Ferguson; Ognjen Gajic; Luciano Gattinoni; Dean Hess; Jordi Mancebo; Maureen O Meade; Daniel F McAuley; Antonio Pesenti; V Marco Ranieri; Gordon D Rubenfeld; Eileen Rubin; Maureen Seckel; Arthur S Slutsky; Daniel Talmor; B Taylor Thompson; Hannah Wunsch; Elizabeth Uleryk; Jan Brozek; Laurent J Brochard Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med Date: 2017-05-01 Impact factor: 21.405
Authors: Meeta Prasad Kerlin; Dylan Small; Barry D Fuchs; Mark E Mikkelsen; Wei Wang; Teresa Tran; Stefania Scott; Aerielle Belk; Jasmine A Silvestri; Tamar Klaiman; Scott D Halpern; Rinad S Beidas Journal: Implement Sci Date: 2021-08-10 Impact factor: 7.327
Authors: Neil R Euliano; Paul Stephan; Konstantinos Michalopoulos; Michael A Gentile; A Joseph Layon; Andrea Gabrielli Journal: Med Devices (Auckl) Date: 2022-08-05
Authors: Andrew J Knighton; Kathryn G Kuttler; Pallavi Ranade-Kharkar; Lauren Allen; Taylor Throne; Jason R Jacobs; Lori Carpenter; Carrie Winberg; Kyle Johnson; Neer Shrestha; Jeffrey P Ferraro; Doug Wolfe; Ithan D Peltan; Rajendu Srivastava; Colin K Grissom Journal: JAMIA Open Date: 2022-07-08
Authors: Briana Short; Alexis Serra; Abdul Tariq; Vivek Moitra; Daniel Brodie; Sapana Patel; Matthew R Baldwin; Natalie H Yip Journal: J Crit Care Date: 2020-09-20 Impact factor: 4.298