MedPath

Role of Social Incentives in PRO Collection

Completed
Conditions
Orthopedic Disorder
Interventions
Other: Interview
Registration Number
NCT03436446
Lead Sponsor
Duke University
Brief Summary

Value-based healthcare is heavily dependent on the accurate measurement of patient outcomes, both immediately after treatment and at long-term intervals. Patient reported outcomes (PROs) are often the central component of any quality improvement process as they are patient centered, reflect the ultimate objective of the intervention and are endorsed by many professional societies as the preferred physician performance metric. Although high response rates are critical to producing reliable data to support value-based payment models, quality improvement, and stakeholder transparency - especially in arthroscopy in which patients often fare well over time and may be less likely to continue with follow-up - response rates to outcome surveys after initial recovery from treatment are consistently below 50%. Monetary incentives offer only minor improvements in response rates against large increases in already rising costs. Individually tailored social incentives - as grounded in current behavioral economic practice - offer a potential cost-effective solution to this problem in Sports Medicine and arthroscopy.

The investigators predict that well-constructed, personal social incentives will increase response rates for long-term follow-up of episodic care compared to control. The investigators predict these rates will vary depending on the patient demographics and other characteristics.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
8
Inclusion Criteria
  • English speaking
  • Orthopedic patient
  • 6-24 months post-operative
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Exclusion Criteria
  • Non-English speaking
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Orthopedic PatientsInterviewOrthopedic patients will undergo an interview with the research team regarding the framing of various social incentives to promote increased response rates for patient reported outcome measures post-operatively.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Interview feedbackEnd of discussion with patient, 15 minutes

The investigators will use feedback from the interviews to adjust the social incentives.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Duke University Health System

🇺🇸

Durham, North Carolina, United States

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