Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Section of General Internal Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Feb 11;15(2):e0228767. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228767. eCollection 2020.
Hepatitis C (HCV) infection is a significant health threat, with increasing incidence rates in the setting of the opioid crisis. Many patients miss appointments and cannot initiate treatment. We implemented financial incentives to improve appointment attendance in a primary care-based HCV treatment setting.
We conducted a systems-level financial incentives intervention at the Adult Primary Care HCV Treatment Program at Boston Medical Center which provides care to many patients with substance use disorders. From April 1 to June 30, 2017, we provided a $15 gift card to patients who attended appointments with an HCV treatment provider. We evaluated the effectiveness of the incentives by 1) conducting a monthly interrupted time series analysis to assess trends in attendance January 2016-September 2017; and 2) comparing the proportion of attended appointments during the intervention to a historical comparison group in the previous year, April 1 to June 30, 2016.
327 visits were scheduled over the study period; 198 during the intervention and 129 during the control period. Of patient visits in the intervention group, 72.7% were attended relative to 61.2% of comparison group visits (p = 0.03). Appointments in the intervention group were more likely to be attended (adjusted odds ratio 1.94, 95% confidence interval 1.16-3.24). Interrupted time series analysis showed that the intervention was associated with an average increase of 15.4 attended visits per 100 appointments scheduled, compared to the period prior to the intervention (p = 0.01).
Implementation of a financial incentive program was associated with improved appointment attendance at a safety-net hospital-based primary care HCV treatment program. A randomized trial to establish efficacy and broader implementation potential is warranted.
丙型肝炎(HCV)感染是一个重大的健康威胁,在阿片类药物危机的背景下,其发病率不断上升。许多患者会错过预约,无法开始治疗。我们实施了经济激励措施,以提高初级保健为基础的 HCV 治疗环境中的预约就诊率。
我们在波士顿医疗中心的成人初级保健 HCV 治疗计划中实施了一项系统层面的经济激励干预措施,该计划为许多患有物质使用障碍的患者提供服务。从 2017 年 4 月 1 日至 6 月 30 日,我们为与 HCV 治疗提供者预约就诊的患者提供了 15 美元的礼品卡。我们通过以下方式评估了激励措施的有效性:1)进行每月中断时间序列分析,以评估 2016 年 1 月至 2017 年 9 月的就诊趋势;2)将干预期间的就诊比例与前一年同期(2016 年 4 月 1 日至 6 月 30 日)的历史对照组进行比较。
在研究期间共安排了 327 次就诊,其中 198 次在干预期间,129 次在对照组。在干预组的患者就诊中,72.7%的患者就诊,而对照组就诊的比例为 61.2%(p=0.03)。干预组的预约就诊更有可能(调整后的优势比 1.94,95%置信区间 1.16-3.24)。中断时间序列分析显示,与干预前相比,该干预措施平均使每 100 次预约增加了 15.4 次就诊(p=0.01)。
在基于初级保健的 HCV 治疗计划的非营利性医院实施经济激励计划与提高预约就诊率相关。需要进行随机试验以确定其疗效和更广泛的实施潜力。