Enhancing Patient Ability to Understand and Utilize Complex Information Concerning Medication Self-management
- Conditions
- Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Drug Facts BoxesBehavioral: SMART ProgramBehavioral: Medication Guides
- Registration Number
- NCT02820038
- Lead Sponsor
- University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- Brief Summary
The aim of the proposed project is to compare the effectiveness of two strategies designed to enhance patient understanding of medication risks/benefits: (1) Medication Guides, mandated for many medications by the Food and Drug Administration and (2) Drug Facts Boxes, developed by Woloshin and Schwartz to enhance the usability of consumer medication information. The investigators will also assess whether the effectiveness of these communication strategies can be increased by Gist Reasoning Training, which is designed to enhance patients' ability to extract meaningful gist from complex information.The investigators anticipate enrolling 300 individuals with rheumatoid arthritis. The study will use a randomized controlled trial design with four study arms. Data will be collected primarily via self-administered, Internet-based surveys using REDCap. All participants will be followed for 6 months after the completion of baseline data collection.
- Detailed Description
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic, autoimmune disorder affecting 0.5% to 1% of the adult population in developed countries worldwide. Current guidelines underscore the importance of aggressive treatment of RA with disease modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDS) to control inflammation. Aggressive treatment has been shown to improve patient-centered outcomes, including better symptom control, functional status, and health-related quality of life and reduce the risk of premature death. A major issue in implementing aggressive therapy in practice, however, involves patient reluctance to escalate therapy when they believe that their symptoms are tolerable, despite the presence of active disease, due to concerns about medications risks. Moreover, patients often find it difficult to obtain accurate and personally-relevant information about medication risks and benefits that is written in language they can understand. There is a clear gap between the information patients want about medication risks and benefits and the information they currently receive as part of routine care.
The aim of the proposed project is to compare the effectiveness of two strategies designed to enhance patient understanding of medication risks/benefits: (1) Medication Guides, mandated for many medications by the Food and Drug Administration and (2) Drug Facts Boxes, developed by Woloshin and Schwartz to enhance the usability of consumer medication information. The investigators will also assess whether the effectiveness of these communication strategies can be increased by Gist Reasoning Training, which is designed to enhance patients' ability to extract meaningful gist from complex information.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 286
- Age 18 years or older
- Able to speak and read in English
- Physician confirmed RA define by 1987 American College of Rheumatology criteria
- Moderate or highly active rheumatoid arthritis (assess by Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data 3 (RAPID3) score > 2.0) and
- Physician indicates patient is a candidate for initiation or escalation of Disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) therapy
- Hearing or visually impaired
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- FACTORIAL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Drug Facts Boxes Only Drug Facts Boxes Approximately 75 participants will be assigned to this study group. Participants will ONLY receive Drug Facts Boxes for rheumatoid arthritis medications. Drug Facts Boxes & SMART Program SMART Program Approximately 75 participants will be assigned to this study group. Participants will receive Drug Facts Boxes for rheumatoid arthritis medicationsAND will be enrolled into the Strategic Memory Advanced Reasoning Training (SMART) Program. Other CMI Only Medication Guides Approximately 75 participants will be assigned to this study group. Participants will ONLY receive medication guides, or other comparable Consumer Medication Information (CMI), for rheumatoid arthritis medications. Other CMI & SMART Program Medication Guides Approximately 75 participants will be assigned to this study group. Participants will receive medication guides, or other comparable Consumer Medication Information (CMI), for rheumatoid arthritis medications AND will be enrolled into the Strategic Memory Advanced Reasoning Training (SMART) Program. Other CMI & SMART Program SMART Program Approximately 75 participants will be assigned to this study group. Participants will receive medication guides, or other comparable Consumer Medication Information (CMI), for rheumatoid arthritis medications AND will be enrolled into the Strategic Memory Advanced Reasoning Training (SMART) Program. Drug Facts Boxes & SMART Program Drug Facts Boxes Approximately 75 participants will be assigned to this study group. Participants will receive Drug Facts Boxes for rheumatoid arthritis medicationsAND will be enrolled into the Strategic Memory Advanced Reasoning Training (SMART) Program.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Percentage of Participants Classified as Having Made an Informed Decision at 6 Months Month 6 Follow-up Informed decision making is characterized by making a value-consistent decision based on accurate knowledge. Knowledge will be assessed as described under Outcome 2. Values will be assessed using a 10-item scale developed by Fraenkel et al. Scores on this scale can range from 0 to 10, with lower scores reflecting a reluctance to use medications to control disease activity. Participants will be classified as having made an informed choice if they: (1) answered at least 85% of the knowledge items correctly, scored 6 or more on the values scale, and are currently taking one or more DMARDS OR (2) answered 85% of the knowledge items correctly, scored 5 or less on the values measure, and are not currently taking a DMARD. Otherwise, individuals will be classified as not having made an informed choice.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Mean Arthritis Self-Efficacy at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up The investigators will assess confidence in one's ability to manage arthritis symptoms in different situations via the 8-item Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale (e.g., keep pain from interfering with things participants want to do). Responses are recorded on a 100-point scale with endpoints labeled "Very Uncertain" and "Very Certain". This measure has been widely used in arthritis patient populations for over two decades and has been shown to have excellent psychometric properties, including high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha generally exceeds 0.90) and sensitivity to change following participation in illness self-management programs. To create a total scale score, the investigators summed participant responses across the items in the scale and divided by the number of items answered. Thus, the scale has a possible range of 0 to 100. Higher scores indicate greater self-efficacy.
Mean Satisfaction With Medication Information at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up This outcome will be assessed by the 17-item Satisfaction with Information about Medicines Scale (SIMS). Items ask participants to rate the amount of information they have received about different aspects of their medications. Responses are summed across items to yield a total score with a possible range of 0 to 17, with higher scores reflecting greater satisfaction with the amount of information received.
Mean Overall Treatment Satisfaction at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up The Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication (TSQM-9) will be used to assess treatment satisfaction. TSQM-9 has 3 subscales: effectiveness, convenience and overall satisfaction. Items ask participants to rate their satisfaction with difference aspect of their treatment regimen on a 7-point scale with endpoints labeled, Extremely Dissatisfied (1) and Extremely Satisfied (7). Internal consistency of each subscale has been demonstrated with Cronbach's alpha exceeding 0.80 for each sub-scale. Each subscale has been shown to discriminate between individuals classified as exhibiting Low vs. Medium medication adherence. The investigators combined items across all three subscales to yield a measure of overall treatment satisfaction (range: 0 to 100, with higher scores reflecting greater satisfaction).
Mean Illness Intrusiveness at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Illness Intrusiveness will be assessed by the 13-item Illness Intrusiveness Ratings Scale. Items ask respondents to rate the degree to which their "illness and/or its treatment" interferes with aspects of life that are essential for quality of life. Responses will be recorded on a visual analog scale, with endpoints labeled Not Very Much (0) and Very Much (100). The instrument will be scored by summing across all items and dividing by the number of items answered to yield a total score ranging from 0 to 100 where higher values reflect greater illness intrusiveness.
Mean Knowledge of the Risks and Benefits Associated With DMARD Therapy at 6 Months Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Knowledge of DMARD risks and benefits will be assessed by measures developed by Fraenkel et al., Barton et al., and Fayet et al. The combined measure will have a total of 36 items. Most items are answered on a true/false scale (with a don't know option provided). Each correct response will receive 1-point (maximum of 36 points). Scores transformed to a 100-point scale (ranging from 0-100) with higher values reflecting greater knowledge.
Mean Gist Reasoning Ability, Complex Abstraction at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up The investigators used the Test of Strategic Learning (TOSL) to quantify participants' ability to abstract gist meanings from complex text. The TOSL consists of 4 text passages varying in length (from 291 to 575 words) and complexity. Each participant responded to one passage at each time point. Participants were asked to provide a summary of the original text, focused on bottom-line-meaning rather than specific details. Responses were scored to assess the number of abstracted ideas (Complex Abstraction, range 0 to 8) using an objective scoring system by a trained and experienced rater, blinded to participants' group assignment and time point of testing. Higher scores indicate more ideas abstracted.
The investigators will assess change in the total score over time from baseline to 6 month follow-up.Mean Health Distress at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Health Distress will be assessed by the 4-item measure developed by Lorig and colleagues. This measure was adapted from the Medical Outcomes Study health distress scare for use in arthritis populations. The adapted measure has demonstrated high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha= .87) and responsiveness to change following completion of an arthritis self-management course. Participants will respond to each question on a 6-point scale, ranging from None of the Time (0) to All of the Time (5). Thus, the total score will range from 0 to 5, with higher scores reflecting greater Health Distress.
Mean Fatigue at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Fatigue will be assessed using the Neuro-QOL (Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders) Version 1 item bank. Raw scores are rescaled to a standardized T-score with a mean of 50 and a standard deviation (SD) of 10. The United States general population is used as the reference group. A higher T-score represents greater fatigue.Thus, a person who has a T-score of 70 is two SDs above the average level of fatigue observed in the referenced population.
Mean Health Literacy at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Health literacy will be assessed via the Newest Vital Sign (NVS). This instrument, which tests literacy skills for both numbers and words, has been validated against a previously validated measure of health literacy (the TOFHLA). Participants are given a specially designed ice cream nutrition label to review and are asked a series of questions about the label. 1-point is given for each correct answer (maximum of 6 points). Scores transformed to a 100-point scale (ranging from 0-100) with higher values reflecting greater health literacy.
Mean Visual Selective Learning at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up The Visual Selective Learning (VSL) task will be administered as part of telephone interviews by showing participants 3 lists of 16 words via a PowerPoint presentation embedded in a YouTube video. Each word will appear on a separate screen for 1 second. Half of the words will be in uppercase and half will be in lowercase. In some trials, participants will be instructed that uppercase words are valued at 10 points and lowercase words at 1 point; in other trials, the point value was the opposite. Participants will be told to remember as many words as they could, but that their goal is to earn as many points as possible. Different word lists will be used at each time point and the lists will be balanced across participants over the course of the study using procedures parallel to those for the TOSL. At each time point, scores will be summed across the three lists, yielding a composite score with a possible range from 0 to 264, with higher numbers reflect greater VSL.
Mean Values at 6-Months Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Values. Questions included in the self-administered questionnaires asked participants to indicate the extent to which they agreed or disagreed with 10 simple values statements (e.g., It is OK to ignore the risk of a serious side effect if it is extremely rare; It is better to continue with the pain I know than to change my medications) developed by Fraenkel and colleagues. Responses were recorded on a 4-point scale ranging from 1=Strongly Agree to 4=Strongly Disagree. Responses were then summed and rescored to yield a composite scale that ranged from -15 to +15, where positive numbers reflected values favoring the use of medications to control rheumatoid arthritis (RA) disease activity.
Mean Gist Reasoning Ability, Lesson Quality at 6 Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up The investigators used the Test of Strategic Learning (TOSL) to quantify participants' ability to abstract gist meanings from complex text. The TOSL consists of 4 text passages varying in length (from 291 to 575 words) and complexity. Each participant responded to one passage at each time point. Participants were asked to provide a summary of the original text, focused on bottom-line-meaning rather than specific details. Responses were scored to assess the quality of high-level interpretations (Lesson Quality, range 0 to 5) using an objective scoring system by a trained and experienced rater, blinded to participants' group assignment and time point of testing. Higher scores reflect better lesson quality.
Mean Medication Adherence at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Medication Adherence was assessed by a single question that asked: "All things considered, how much of the time do you use your RA medications EXACTLY as directed?" Responses were recorded on a 100-point visual analog scale with endpoints labeled "None of the Time" and "All of the time". Higher values reflect greater medication adherence.
Information Seeking: Use of RA Self-Management Website 6 months The investigators created a website that provided easy access to information about RA, treatment options, and self-management strategies. Participants were emailed a link to this website immediately after completion of 6-week follow-up data collection. The investigators used Google analytics to track whether participants accessed the website.
Mean Verbatim Recall of Information Concerning Medication Benefits and Risks 6 weeks Verbatim recall of information concerning potential medication benefits and harms will be assessed by medication-specific items developed specifically for this study. For each medication, the investigators will identify one potential benefit and one potential harm listed in the Drug Facts Box. Each question will ask participants about the probability of benefit/harm using a multiple-choice response format. To minimize response burden, participants will be asked these questions in relation to only one of their current RA medications. Correct responses will be summed across the benefit and harm items to yield a score ranging from 0 to 2. Higher numbers reflect greater verbatim recall.
Mean Global Health Status at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up This outcome will be assessed by a single-item asking participants to rate their current health on a 5-point scare where 1=Poor, 2=Fair, 3= Good, 4= Very Good, and 5= Excellent. This item is part of the Medical Outcomes Study Core Survey Instrument and responses have been shown to predict mortality and health care utilization as well as multi-item health status measures.
Mean Disease Activity at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Disease Activity will be assess using the Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data 3 (RAPID3). This instrument is based on the Multi-Dimensional Health Assessment Questionnaire (MDHAQ), which is adapted from the standard HAQ. The RAPID3 includes the 3 Core Data Set measures of physical function, pain, and patient global estimate. The score for physical function ranges from 0 to 10 and is calculated by adding the ten activities of daily living, each scored from 0 to 3 by the patient and dividing the total raw score by 3. Pain and global estimate of health are measured on a likert scale from 0 to 10. The three 0-10 scores for physical function, pain, and global assessment of health are added together and divided by 3 to create a composite score, ranging from 0 to 10. Higher values reflect greater disease activity.
Mean Depression at 6-Month Follow-up Adjusted for Baseline Month 6 Follow-up Depression will be assessed using the Neuro-QOL (Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders) Version 1 item bank. Raw scores are rescaled to a standardized T-score with a mean of 50 and a standard deviation (SD) of 10. The United States general population is used as the reference group. A higher T-score represents greater depression.Thus, a person who has a T-score of 70 is two SDs above the average level of depression observed in the referenced population.
Information Seeking: Participating in BetterChoices, BetterHealth 6 months After the 6 week follow-up interview, all participants were given an opportunity to take part in the BetterChoices, BetterHealth program. To assess information seeking, the investigators tracked whether or not participants enrolled in the class and attended at least one class session. This variable was coded such that: 0=Either did not enroll or did not attend any class sessions, 1=Enrolled and attended at least one class session.
Mean Medication Self-Management Knowledge 6 months Medication Self-Management Knowledge will be assessed using a 45-item medication-specific measure tailored to the medications each participant reports using and developed specifically for this study. The questions will draw on information found in the medication information provided to participants. Correct answers will be summed across the 45 items. Scores transformed to a 100-point scale (ranging from 0-100) with higher values reflecting greater knowledge.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
🇺🇸Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States