ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Smarter Care Virginia, Examining Low-Value Care in Virginia

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) logo

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Kidney Diseases
Cardiac Disease
Surgery
Eye Diseases
Low Back Pain

Treatments

Behavioral: Multicomponent Physician Performance Peer-Comparison Feedback Intervention

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04053335
75486025

Details and patient eligibility

About

Low-value care is defined as patient care that provides no net benefit to patients in specific clinical scenarios, and can cause patient harm. Prior research has documented high-rates of low-value care in Virginia; this work has helped to inspire a Virginia government-sponsored quality improvement initiative to reduce low-value care. Funded by an Arnold Ventures grant, six large health systems in Virginia volunteered to partner with the Virginia Center for Health Innovation (VCHI) to reduce use of nine low-value health services (three preoperative testing measures, two cardiac screening measures, one diagnostic eye imaging measure, one low-back pain opioid measure, one low-back pain imaging measure and one peripherally inserted central catheter [PICC] measure). These health systems include nearly 7000 clinicians practicing across more than 1000 sites.

VCHI is implementing a nonrandomized physician peer-comparison feedback quality improvement intervention to reduce use of nine low-value services. Modeling will be used to identify and use propensity score matching to match six intervention health systems to six comparable control health systems. VCHI will provide education, quality improvement training and financial resources to each site, and VCHI will use the Milliman MedInsight Health Waste Calculator to create the peer comparison reports using the Virginia All Payer Claims Database (APCD). VCHI will use additional measures from The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). Additionally, VCHI will use AHRQ data to attribute physicians and health care facilities to health systems.

The primary purpose of the initiative is to improve quality of care for Virginia residents and this initiative is not being done for research purposes. Nevertheless, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) plans to rigorously study and publish the impact of this intervention across the state of Virginia, which is why the UCLA team pre-registered the initiative. The UCLA team will use the Virginia APCD to evaluate the impact of the intervention. Please note: the APCD has a 1-year time-lag of data collection and is a dynamic database, meaning that its population of enrollees changes from year to year. This intervention was initially designed as a randomized step-wedge intervention; the intervention was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic and began in September 2020 for all intervention groups. The intervention period was extended through December 2022. As a result, the initial design was modified.

Enrollment

5,000,000 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria

All adult patients (aged 18 or older) at each of the six health systems who are at risk for receiving low-value care across each of the nine measures.

  • For preoperative testing, eligible patients include those with a health system evaluation and management visits 30 days prior to low-risk surgery.
  • For eye imaging, eligible patients will be patients with evaluation and management visits with a health system ophthalmologist/optometrist.
  • For cardiac screening, eligible patients are patients with an ambulatory evaluation and management visit (all specialties).
  • For the PICC line measure, eligible patients would include hospitalized patients.
  • For the low-back pain measures, eligible patients include those who have a diagnosis of low-back pain or acute low-back pain.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients under the age of 18.
  • Patients who do not meet the above criteria.
  • Patients who do not receive care at each of the six health systems.

Trial design

5,000,000 participants in 2 patient groups

Cohort 1: Multicomponent Physician Performance Peer-Comparison
Description:
Cohort 1 (6 groups): Inova/Signature Parters, Sentara/Sentara Quality Care Network, Ballad Health, Carilion Clinic, Health Care Associates Virginia/Virginia Care Partners, and Virginia and Commonwealth University Health System Note that the original design for the intervention was a step-wedge randomization. However, this was changed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which necessitated a delay in all study activities from March 2020 - September 2020. The intervention began in September 2020. Data collection concluded in December 2022.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Multicomponent Physician Performance Peer-Comparison Feedback Intervention
Cohort 2: Multicomponent Physician Performance Peer-Comparison
Description:
Cohort 2 (6 groups): Six comparable control health systems identified via matching

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems