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Human Factors Intervention to Reduce Risk in Primary Care of the Elderly (SAFE-C)

University of Wisconsin (UW) logo

University of Wisconsin (UW)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Primary Health Care
Aged
Clinical Information

Treatments

Other: Patient Overview Document

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01326637
2010-0447
R18HS017899 (U.S. AHRQ Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Human factors engineering literature makes clear that appropriate, well-designed and well-timed information improves decision making and can reduce mental workload. Data from a previous study showed that appropriate, well-designed and well-timed information is not present in many primary care encounters with elderly patients. This puts primary care physicians at risk of higher mental workload and poor decision making which can affect the quality and safety of care delivered to patients. Elderly patients are at particular risk because they are more likely to have more comorbidities, medications, and cognitive impairments.

Dr. Karsh and his research team will test an intervention to improve the performance of primary care physicians and, thus the safety of primary care of the elderly. The investigators will use a randomized experiment, with random assignment at the level of patient, to test and evaluate the intervention. The evaluation will involve 4 primary care clinics, with 4 primary care physicians per clinic. The investigators will collect data from 768 patient visits pre-intervention and 1536 patient visits during the intervention. Intervention patients will be randomly assigned to the intervention or care as usual.

The Intervention has two components:

Pre-visit care coordination:

  • 5-7 days prior to a study patient's appointment with his/her doctor, the doctor's nurse/MA will call the study patient and collect pertinent clinical information about the patient using a data collection form the investigators call a Patient Overview Document or POD.
  • The nurse/MA will ensure that any lab results, consultant reports, ER reports, imaging studies, etc., that will be needed by the physician are available to the doctor.

Team Meeting:

On the day of the patient's appointment and prior to the beginning of the clinic session, the nurse/MA will meet briefly with the doctor to jointly review the POD.

Hypotheses:

H1. Primary Care Physician (PCP): The intervention will increase situation awareness, reduce PCP mental workload, reduce PCP perceived likelihood of error, and improve PCP visit satisfaction. PCP efficiency, as measured by encounter problem density during a visit, will also improve.

H2. Patient: The intervention will improve patients' perceptions of their visits on a variety of AHRQ CAHPS measures, such as physician knowledge of patient history.

H3. Patient: The intervention will not impact the number or types of problems addressed during the visit.

H4. Clinic: The intervention will not affect visit RVUs

Enrollment

2,332 patients

Sex

All

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Must be greater than or equal to 65 years of age
  • Must be patients of participating physicians

Exclusion criteria

  • Cannot speak English
  • Cannot hear well enough to respond to questions via the telephone or do not have a caregiver who can respond to questions on their behalf

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

2,332 participants in 2 patient groups

intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Received the intervention: previsit planning phone call with filled out patient overview document \& clinician huddle
Treatment:
Other: Patient Overview Document
observation
No Intervention group
Description:
Received usual care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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