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Using Behavioral Economics to Enhance Appointment Reminders and Reduce Missed Visits (No Show)

VA Office of Research and Development logo

VA Office of Research and Development

Status

Completed

Conditions

Appointment Reminders

Treatments

Behavioral: Caring + Consequences for Others + Consequences for Self + Social Norms + Behavioral Instructions
Behavioral: Social Norms + Behavioral Instructions
Behavioral: Caring + Consequences for Others + Behavioral Instructions
Behavioral: Caring + Consequences for Self + Behavioral Instructions

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT03850431
IIR 17-134
HX002449 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

"No-shows," or missed visits are a persistent problem in all health care systems. They contribute to worsened patient access, longer wait times, and inefficient use limited health care resources. The VA's no-show rate has shown no improvement in years, resulting in a staggering 9 million ambulatory no-shows in Fiscal Year (FY) 2015. Appointment reminders are an essential and proven element to addressing no-shows but major research gaps exist. Behavioral economics (BE) and allied fields offer key insights that are relevant to developing innovation in the field of appointment reminders. Adding "nudges" informed by concepts such as social norms, behavioral intentions, clear instructions, and potential negative consequences to the Veteran and others is a novel but evidence-based way to create enhanced appointment reminders. Seemingly small changes to appointment letters can create measurable shifts in appointment attendance and no-shows. Even more, these behavioral nudges can produce large benefits when taken to scale and compounded across a population.

This project will address several aims, including: developing BE-informed messages to incorporate into enhanced appointment reminders; evaluating the effect of several versions of enhanced appointment reminders; and identifying potential barriers and facilitators to widespread implementation of enhanced appointment reminder messages.

Full description

Objectives: The overarching objective of this proposal is to test the effectiveness of simple and scalable enhancements to appointment reminders in reducing no-shows, and prepare for larger-scale implementation.

Plan: "No-shows," or missed visits are a persistent problem in all health care systems. They contribute to worsened patient access, longer wait times, and inefficient use limited health care resources. The VA's no-show rate has shown no improvement in years, resulting in a staggering 9 million ambulatory no-shows in FY2015. Appointment reminders are an essential and proven element to addressing no-shows but major research gaps exist. Behavioral economics (BE) and allied fields offer key insights that are relevant to developing innovation in the field of appointment reminders. Adding "nudges" informed by concepts such as social norms, behavioral intentions, clear instructions, and potential negative consequences to the Veteran and others is a novel but evidence-based way to create enhanced appointment reminders. Seemingly small changes to appointment letters can create measurable shifts in appointment attendance and no-shows. Even more, these behavioral nudges can produce large benefits when taken to scale and compounded across a population.

The investigators will address the following aims:

  1. Aim 1: Develop and iteratively refine BE-informed messages based on Veterans' perceptions, and incorporate them into enhanced appointment reminders.
  2. Aim 2: Determine the effect of four versions of enhanced appointment reminders on measures relevant to treatment access, compared with usual reminders.
  3. Aim 3: Evaluate differences in treatment effect associated with four versions of enhanced appointment reminders.
  4. Aim 4: Characterize potential barriers and facilitators to widespread implementation of enhanced appointment reminder messages.

Methods: The investigators will first determine the validity of a series of draft messages, which are informed by concepts and principles from BE, psychology, and related fields and will be included in the intervention; the investigators will also explore potential mechanisms of action, and measure any harms by assessing Veterans' perceptions of the messages (Aim 1). After intervention refinement, the investigators will conduct a cluster randomized controlled trial to test 4 interventions, consisting of variations in nudges included in appointment letters, and compare them to usual appointment letters (Aims 2 and 3). The trial will be conducted at VA Portland Health Care System (VAPORHCS) in primary care and mental health clinics. The investigators will evaluate changes in no-show rates, attendance and cancellation rates and appointment wait times. Finally, the investigators will conduct a qualitative assessment with key informants to inform potential barriers and facilitators to implementation of revised appointment reminders (Aim 4).

Relevance to VA's Mission: This proposal directly addresses two of the six Health Services Research and Development Service (HSR&D) priority areas: access and mental and behavioral health. First, reducing no-shows is likely to improve efficiency of access to care and reduce wait time. Second, this proposal includes a focus on interventions in mental health settings, which have especially high no-show rates and may have more potential for improvement.

Medical Subject Heading Terms: Economics, Behavioral; Mental Health; Healthcare Quality, Access, and Evaluation

Enrollment

34,516 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All subjects will be a minimum of 18 years old.
  • All subjects will be patients with scheduled outpatient appointments (either primary care or mental health) in the VA Portland Health Care System.
  • Race and ethnicity will not be used in determining inclusion or exclusion of subjects.

Exclusion criteria

  • None

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

34,516 participants in 5 patient groups

Social Norms + Behavioral Instructions
Experimental group
Description:
Clinics assigned a letter with two types of nudges (Social Norms + Behavioral Instructions)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Social Norms + Behavioral Instructions
Caring + Consequences for Others + Behavioral Instructions
Experimental group
Description:
Clinics assigned a letter with three types of nudges (Caring + Consequences for Others + Behavioral Instructions)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Caring + Consequences for Others + Behavioral Instructions
Caring + Consequences for Self + Behavioral Instructions
Experimental group
Description:
Clinics assigned a letter with three types of nudges (Caring + Consequences for Self + Behavioral Instructions)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Caring + Consequences for Self + Behavioral Instructions
Combination of all Nudges
Experimental group
Description:
Clinics assigned a letter with a combination of all types of nudges (Behavioral: Caring + Consequences for Others + Consequences for Self + Social Norms + Behavioral Instructions)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Caring + Consequences for Others + Consequences for Self + Social Norms + Behavioral Instructions
Usual Care
No Intervention group
Description:
Clinics assigned to usual care. Usual care consisted of a letter with basic appointment information on date, location, and phone number(s) for scheduling changes

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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