University of North Carolina Research Center for Excellence in Clinical Preventive Services, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill2Division of General Medicine and Clinical Epidemiolo.
University of North Carolina Research Center for Excellence in Clinical Preventive Services, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill5Community Programs, Napa County Office of Education.
JAMA Intern Med. 2016 Jan;176(1):31-41. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.7339.
Healthcare overuse, the delivery of low-value services, is increasingly recognized as a critical problem. However, little is known about the comparative effectiveness of alternate formats for presenting benefits and harms information to patients as a strategy to reduce overuse.
To examine the effect of different benefits and harms presentations on patients' intentions to accept low-value or potentially low-value screening services (prostate cancer screening in men ages 50-69 years; osteoporosis screening in low-risk women ages 50-64 years; or colorectal cancer screening in men and women ages 76-85 years).
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Randomized clinical trial of 775 individuals eligible to receive information about any 1 of the 3 screening services and scheduled for a visit with their clinician. Participants were randomized to 1 of 4 intervention arms that differed in terms of presentation format: words, numbers, numbers plus narrative, and numbers plus framed presentation. The trial was conducted from September 2012 to June 2014 at 2 family medicine and 2 internal medicine practices affiliated with the Duke Primary Care Research Consortium. The data were analyzed between May and September of 2015.
One-page evidence-based decision support sheets on each of the 3 screening services, with benefits and harms information presented in 1 of 4 formats: words, numbers, numbers plus narratives, or numbers plus a framed presentation.
The primary outcome was change in intention to accept screening (on a response scale from 1 to 5). Our secondary outcomes included general and disease-specific knowledge, perceived risk and consequences of disease, screening attitudes, perceived net benefit of screening, values clarity, and self-efficacy for screening.
We enrolled and randomly allocated 775 individuals, aged 50 to 85 years, to 1 of 4 intervention arms: 195 to words, 192 to numbers, 196 to narrative, and 192 to framed formats. Intentions to accept screening were high before the intervention and change in intentions did not differ across intervention arms (words, -0.07; numbers, -0.05; numbers plus narrative, -0.12; numbers plus framed presentation, -0.02; P = .57 for all comparisons). Change in other outcomes also showed no difference across intervention arms. Results were similar when stratified by screening service.
Single, brief, written decision support interventions, such as the ones in this study, are unlikely to be sufficient to change intentions for screening. Alternate and additional interventions are needed to reduce overused screening services.
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01694784.
医疗保健过度使用,即提供低价值服务,正日益被视为一个关键问题。然而,对于以减少过度使用为目的的向患者呈现利益和危害信息的不同格式的比较效果,我们知之甚少。
研究不同的利益和危害呈现方式对患者接受低价值或潜在低价值筛查服务的意愿的影响(50-69 岁男性的前列腺癌筛查;50-64 岁低风险女性的骨质疏松症筛查;76-85 岁男性和女性的结直肠癌筛查)。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项针对 775 名符合任何 1 项筛查服务信息获取条件且计划与临床医生就诊的个体的随机临床试验。参与者被随机分配到 4 个干预组中的 1 个,这些组在呈现格式上有所不同:文字、数字、数字加叙述、数字加框架呈现。该试验于 2012 年 9 月至 2014 年 6 月在与杜克初级保健研究联盟相关的 2 家家庭医学和 2 家内科诊所进行。数据于 2015 年 5 月至 9 月进行分析。
关于 3 项筛查服务的每页基于证据的决策支持表,以 4 种格式中的 1 种呈现利益和危害信息:文字、数字、数字加叙述或数字加框架呈现。
主要结局是接受筛查的意愿变化(在 1 到 5 的反应量表上)。我们的次要结局包括一般和疾病特异性知识、疾病的感知风险和后果、筛查态度、感知筛查的净收益、价值观清晰度和筛查的自我效能感。
我们共纳入并随机分配了 775 名年龄在 50 至 85 岁之间的个体至 4 个干预组中的 1 个:195 名接受文字组、192 名接受数字组、196 名接受叙述组和 192 名接受框架格式组。在干预之前,接受筛查的意愿较高,且干预组之间的意愿变化无差异(文字组,-0.07;数字组,-0.05;数字加叙述组,-0.12;数字加框架组,-0.02;所有比较的 P 值均为>.57)。干预组之间其他结局的变化也无差异。按筛查服务分层后,结果也相似。
像本研究中的这种单一、简短的书面决策支持干预措施不太可能足以改变筛查的意愿。需要采取替代和额外的干预措施来减少过度使用的筛查服务。
clinicaltrials.gov 标识符:NCT01694784。