Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Cluster Randomized Trial to Assess the Impact of Opinion Leader Endorsed Evidence Summaries on Improving Quality of Prescribing for Patients With Chronic Cardiovascular Disease
BACKGROUND: Although much has been written about the influence of local opinion leaders on
clinical practice, there have been few controlled studies of their effect, and almost none
have attempted to change prescribing in the community for chronic conditions such as
congestive heart failure (CHF) or ischemic heart disease (IHD). These two conditions are
common and there is very good evidence about how to best prevent morbidity and mortality -
and very good evidence that quality of care is, in general, suboptimal. Practice audits have
demonstrated that about half of eligible CHF patients are prescribed ACE inhibitors (and
fewer still reaching appropriate target doses) and less than one-third of patients with
established IHD are prescribed statins (with many fewer reaching recommended cholesterol
targets). It is apparent that interventions to improve quality of prescribing are urgently
needed.
HYPOTHESIS: An intervention that consists of patient-specific one-page evidence summaries,
generated and then endorsed by local opinion leaders, will be able to change prescribing
practices of community-based primary care physicians.
DESIGN: A single centre randomized controlled trial comparing an opinion leader intervention
to usual care. Based on random allocation of all physicians in one large Canadian health
region, patients with CHF or IHD (not receiving ACE inhibitors or statins, respectively)
recruited from community pharmacies will be allocated to intervention or usual care. The
primary outcome is improvement in prescription of proven efficacious therapies for CHF (ACE
inhibitors) or IHD (statins) within 6 months of the intervention.
BACKGROUND: Although much has been written about the influence of local opinion leaders on
clinical practice, there have been few controlled studies of their effect, and almost none
have attempted to change prescribing in the community for chronic conditions such as
congestive heart failure (CHF) or ischemic heart disease (IHD). These two conditions are
common and there is very good evidence about how to best prevent morbidity and mortality -
and very good evidence that quality of care is, in general, suboptimal. Practice audits have
demonstrated that about half of eligible CHF patients are prescribed ACE inhibitors (and
fewer still reaching appropriate target doses) and less than one-third of patients with
established IHD are prescribed statins (with many fewer reaching recommended cholesterol
targets). It is apparent that interventions to improve quality of prescribing are urgently
needed.
HYPOTHESIS: An intervention that consists of patient-specific one-page evidence summaries,
generated and then endorsed by local opinion leaders, will be able to change prescribing
practices of community-based primary care physicians.
DESIGN: A single centre randomized controlled trial comparing an opinion leader intervention
to usual care. Based on random allocation of all physicians in one large Canadian health
region, patients with CHF or IHD (not receiving ACE inhibitors or statins, respectively)
recruited from community pharmacies will be allocated to intervention or usual care. The
primary outcome is improvement in prescription of proven efficacious therapies for CHF (ACE
inhibitors) or IHD (statins) within 6 months of the intervention.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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