Hypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Quality With Outpatient Decision Support
Assesses physician compliance with paper-based and electronic guidelines, reminders, and alerts for outpatient settings. Target areas for the reminders and alerts are disease management, medication management, and interpretation of abnormal test results.
The evidence base for practicing medicine continues to improve. However, abundant data show
that gaps exist between best evidence and practice. Moreover, health care costs are climbing
at an alarming rate. We propose to ask three related questions: 1) how effective are
computer decision-support systems for improving compliance with evidence-based guidelines
and costs in the ambulatory setting; 2) what is the impact on guideline compliance of
applications that allow clinicians to track and follow-up test results; and 3) what are the
main barriers to acceptance of guidelines delivered via real-time clinical decision-support
systems.
Our work and that of others has shown that computerized decision-support in the form of
alerts and reminders can improve outcomes and reduce costs in the inpatient setting.
However, fewer data are available in the outpatient setting. An elegant series of studies
from Regenstrief found that certain computer-based interventions, such as displaying charges
for tests, prior test results, and the likelihood that a particular test would be abnormal,
all reduced outpatient utilization, and that reminders to perform health maintenance
procedures improved compliance. However, such systems are still not used broadly and the
full potential of computer-based technology remains to be tested.
Also, there is ample evidence that physicians do not always act optimally on the results of
patient studies and often are remiss at communicating satisfactorily with patients about the
results of these studies. This situation may be exacerbated by increasing patient volumes in
the face of managed care. The ability of the computer to assist in the tracking and
follow-up of test results as well as communication with patients remains to be evaluated.
Even though some benefits of computer-based decision-support systems have been documented,
such systems are slow to be adopted. Moreover, even when computerized guidelines have
resulted in demonstrable improvements, often this improvement has been smaller than
anticipated. This proposal aims to better understand the barriers to guideline acceptance so
that the benefits of computer based decision-support can be realized.
Our organization, Brigham and Women's Hospital, is in a particularly good position to study
these issues. We have in place a highly developed clinical information system including an
outpatient electronic medical records (EMR) application that has been an active part of the
clinical workflow since 1999. The EMR application currently is used by primary care
physicians at one of our major medical centers to track their patients’ problems,
medications, allergies, and health maintenance data. We are developing a new EMR that will
be used more broadly across our network, and that features a new interface with added
functionality. The new EMR will allow us to evaluate the state of the patient at the time of
the visit and generate reminders if the patient is out of compliance for certain guidelines.
It also includes outpatient order entry that allows physicians to enter medication and
laboratory orders directly into the computer. Decision-support in order entry will allow us
to guide physician decision making at the most opportune time, and then evaluate the result
of that guidance. For automated decision-support applications to be widely adopted, it is
critical that their benefits be demonstrated in a wide variety of situations. We plan to
implement several different types of interventions targeted at various phases of the
clinical workflow to determine which strategies can achieve the greatest benefit.
Specific Aims:
1. To evaluate the effectiveness of paper-based and interactive computer-based alerts and
reminders for improving compliance with guidelines and reducing costs in the ambulatory
setting.
2. To evaluate the impact of computer-based tracking and follow-up reminder systems on
guideline compliance.
3. To identify and address patient, clinician, and system barriers to the effective use of
computer-based clinical decision-support strategies in a diverse array of clinical
settings.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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