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Can Diagnostics and Pharmacological Prescriptions in Patients With Heart Failure be Improved in General Practice?

Not Applicable
Withdrawn
Conditions
Heart Failure
Interventions
Behavioral: Educational intervention
Registration Number
NCT01476566
Lead Sponsor
University of Oslo
Brief Summary

This study will explore the possible effect of a tailored educational intervention towards general practitioners in Norway, in order to improve the quality of treatment for heart failure in general practice.

Detailed Description

Chronic heart failure (HF) is a syndrome with a poor prognosis and with a prevalence increasing steeply by patients' age. Studies indicate that there are large potentials for improving general practitioners' diagnosis and management of HF. We have designed an educational intervention aiming at improving GPs' diagnosis and management of HF.

Peer continuous medical education (CME) groups in general practice will be recruited to a cluster randomised educational intervention study. Participating groups will be randomised either to an intervention- or a control group. A multifaceted intervention has been tailored where key components are educational outreach visits (EOV) to the CME-groups, audit, and feedback. Trained GPs will conduct the EOVs during which evidence-based recommendations for diagnosis and treatment of HF will be presented. A software will be handed out for installation on participants' practice computers, enabling collection of diagnosis- and prescription-data. The captured data will subsequently be linked to corresponding data from the Norwegian Prescription Database (NorPD). Individual feedback reports will be sent each participant in the beginning and at the end of the study. Main outcomes measure is the proportion of HF patients prescribed an ACE-inhibitor (or an angiotensine receptor blocker) and a betablocker in combination. Baseline data will provide material for a descriptive, cross sectional study. Patient related outcomes in terms of HF-hospital admissions and all cause mortality will be obtained by record linkage with NorPD and the Norwegian Patient Registry. Included in the intervention group is also a sub-study using a pop-up programme to facilitate disclosure of non-diagnosed HF patients in own practice. Finally, we plan a questionnaire study (among GPs in intervention group and their HF-patients) to get more knowledge regarding diagnostic workup, quality of care, non-pharmacological issues, and chronic care management of HF.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
Not specified
Inclusion Criteria
  • General practitioner
  • Specialist in general practice
Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Educational interventionEducational interventionA multifaceted intervention has been tailored where key components are educational outreach visits (EOV) to the CME-groups, audit, and feedback. Trained GPs will conduct the EOVs during which evidence-based recommendations for diagnosis and treatment of HF will be presented.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Whether drug-treatment of heart failure will be more adherent to guidelines after an educational intervention towards general practitioners (GPs).1 year

The proportion of heart failure-patients receiving treatment with an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACE-I) or an angiotensin-2 receptor blocker (ARB) and a beta-blocker (BB) before and after an educatopnal intervention.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Hospital admissions and mortality1 year

Differences in heart failure-related hospital admissions and all cause mortality between intervention group and control group.

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