Audit and Feedback for Primary Care: a Cluster-randomized Trial
- Conditions
- Ischemic Heart DiseaseDiabetesHypertension
- Interventions
- Other: High riskOther: Best Practice
- Registration Number
- NCT01878370
- Lead Sponsor
- Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
- Brief Summary
In a previous study, the investigators delivered graphs to family physicians that outlined the proportion of patients with a history of diabetes or heart disease achieving evidence-based quality targets derived from guideline recommendations. A qualitative evaluation found that participating family physicians did not act upon the feedback for two main reasons. First, they felt that targets recommended in guidelines often did not apply for particular patients. Second, they complained that had difficulty using the feedback reports that only provided aggregate level data for clinical action. In this cluster-randomized trial, the investigators test two approaches to conducting audit and feedback that aims to address these issues. The investigators hypothesize that feedback identifying a small number of patients at high-risk for cardiovascular events requiring action will more effectively lead to changes in clinical behavior than feedback identifying all patients not reaching optimal care targets.
- Detailed Description
For the last two years, all physicians contributing data to the Electronic Medical Record Administrative data Linked Database (EMRALD) have received two feedback reports. The first focused on diabetes and the second on patients with heart disease. The reports provide aggregate information regarding the proportion of the family physician's patients meeting quality targets, but no patient-specific information. Currently the feedback is sent to physicians by courier from the EMRALD team every six months.
The intervention arms in this trial are as follows:
* Arm 1 - Standard, aggregate-level feedback reports focusing on the proportion of patients with hypertension and/or diabetes and/or ischemic heart disease meeting targets sent via courier every six months and available on a password protected website. Family physicians in this arm will also have access through this website to patient-level data to identify patients not achieving optimal quality of care targets.
* Arm 2 - Aggregate-level feedback reports focusing on the proportion of patients with hypertension and/or diabetes and/or ischemic heart disease meeting criteria for high-risk sent via courier every six months and available on a password protected website. Family physicians in this arm will also have access through this website to a list of chart numbers identifying those patients at highest risk.
Both arms will have the opportunity to receive continuing medical education credits by completing worksheets that prompt them to reflect upon the data. Family physicians in Arm 1 are asked to complete a worksheet that follows continuous quality improvement principles, including setting an aim statement, engagement with team members in the clinic, testing change concepts at first on a small scale, and then scaling up in a effort to spread best practices. Family physicians in Arm 2 are asked to complete a worksheet that also includes goal setting and action planning, but focuses on reducing the number of patients with high-risk criteria and offers some suggested practice-based approaches.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 177
- Family physicians belonging to and sharing data with the Electronic Medical Record Administrative Linked Database in Ontario
- Patients rostered to these family physicians with diabetes or hypertension or ischemic heart disease
- Family physicians without at least two years of Electronic Medical Record data in EMRALD
- Family physicians without at least 100 rostered, active patients
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description High risk High risk Feedback reports focusing on the identification and management of patients who appear to have poorly managed diseases and who may require recall into clinic. Best Practice Best Practice Feedback reports focusing on the achievement of optimal care targets for patients with chronic disease.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method composite high risk score 12 months The number of high risk indicators a patient meets divided by the number for which they are eligible.
Proportion of patients with perfect composite quality score 12 months perfect composite quality score is equal to one hundred percent
Proportion of patients with perfect composite high risk score 12 months perfect composite high risk score is zero
composite quality score 12 months The number of best-practice quality indicators that a patient is achieving divided by the number for which they are eligible.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Blood pressure 12 months cholesterol (LDL) 12 months
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
🇨🇦Toronto, Ontario, Canada