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The goal of this project is to increase patient adherence to medication using communications and incentives for physicians. The investigators are partnering with a health insurance company, Humana Inc, to design and implement an incentives program for physicians whose patients increase their medication adherence for oral diabetes medication, hypertension (ACEI or ARB) medication, and/or cholesterol (statins) medication. The investigators will use behavioral economics to explore the best way to communicate the incentives to the physicians.
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Traditional economics would suggest that the best way to maximize adherence would be to give physicians financial incentives to improve adherence to all relevant drugs, and that communications to physicians should emphasize all of the relevant drugs. Behavioral economics suggests theory suggests that if you emphasize everything, then you are effectively emphasizing nothing. Behavioral econonmics would suggest to maximize adherence one should give physicians financial incentives for improving adherence for a small number of relevant drugs, and communications to physicians should emphasize a small number of the relevant drugs. This allows physicians to focus their energy and reduces the probability that they will give up because they're overwhelmed, or in other words, avoid the phenomenon called metric fatigue.
Humana has already implemented an incentives program for physicians, and the investigators will work with them to design a program that just focuses on medication adherence. Physicians targeted for this pilot could also be enrolled in another Humana incentives program, but this incentives program will act independently of the other.
There are two treatment dimensions the investigators will test via random assignment at the practice level:
In a previous study to increase uptake of colonoscopies among employees at a partner firm, the investigators found that using a post it note to catch the attention of the employee statistically significantly increased colonoscopy uptake over a control group. The investigators will also employ an eye catching method in the proposed pilot. When physicians are sent a communication regarding the opportunity to receive an incentive as part of our pilot, they will also receive a single patient sheet for each patient who has less than 80% adherence. They will be encouraged to include the patient sheet in their chart as a reminder to discuss medication adherence with their patient the next time they see them. For half of our arms, the investigators will make the patient sheets a bright, non-white, color, in order to futher draw the physicians' attention to that specific paper in their chart.
Our experimental arms will be:
The investigators hypothesize that physicians who receive focused incentives and focused communications will have more patients with increased medication adherence than physicians who receive comprehensive incentives and comprehensive communications. The investigators also hypothsize that physicians who receive patient sheets using bright, non-white paper will have more patients with increased medication adherence than physicians who receive plain white patient sheets.
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734 participants in 11 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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