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Clinical Trial Summary

In this project, the investigators hope to evaluate effective methods of communication with patients with multiple sclerosis regarding habits of physical activity, sleep, and diet. Currently, there is weak evidence regarding how to deliver adequate information at scale in the clinics with respect to diet, exercise, and sleep. It is unclear if receiving structured information impacts patient-reported outcomes in multiple sclerosis (MS). The study team hopes to evaluate the efficacy of after visit direct patient messaging in promoting any behavioral changes, the sustainability of those behavioral changes, and most importantly, if those changes impact patient-reported sense of self-efficacy in the participants disease management. In addition, the study team hopes that the data collected during this study will provide answers on how providing wellness strategies impacts patient reported outcomes, markers of behavior, and sense of disease progression.


Clinical Trial Description

This will be a prospective randomized control trial assessing the impact of the delivery of wellness-related information on patient-reported outcomes in multiple sclerosis. The investigators plan to query all patients who meet inclusion criteria over the course of at least three consecutive months who will be seen at the Johns Hopkins Outpatient Center Multiple Sclerosis clinic. On average, 200 patients are seen in the MS clinic monthly, and the investigators hope to enroll 120 patients in this time period. If the investigators are unable to reach this target number in two months, the investigators will continue to message patients over consecutive months until the investigators reach this number. The study team will send a recruitment message through MyChart to all eligible patients prior to the patients next clinic appointment to participate in the study, after which the patients will be consented (with documentation of waiver of consent) if interested. Those who are interested will be asked to fill out a series of electronic baseline questionnaires prior to the patient's appointment (sent by REDCap using subject-specific links). Participants will subsequently be randomized 1:1 (stratified within each provider's daily clinic schedule) to either receive a secure message providing a set script (see Supplementary Materials) containing information on a number of wellness-related topics in MS (sleep, diet, exercise), or to receiving no additional information other than that provided by the participants clinician. This message will be sent as a secure message through Epic by a member of the study team by the end of the clinic day. At one month and three months after the clinic visit, the study team will send the same questionnaires as were sent at baseline, assessing self-efficacy, reported physical activity, dietary habits, and sleep quality through REDCap subject-specific links. The investigators will assess for any differences in outcomes between the control group and the group who received the wellness-related secure message. The investigators will evaluate for covariates that were imbalanced and adjust models when imbalance did occur, which is plausible given the expected sample size. In addition, the investigators will also evaluate via chart review whether diet, exercise, and sleep were assessed or discussed during the clinic visit. In addition, the investigators will use descriptive statistics to describe participants and compare those who agree versus those who do not agree to participate. The investigators hope to evaluate density of use of the electronic medical record amongst this cohort, as well as demographic data on social determinants of health, including race, socioeconomic status, and geographic location, in order to evaluate predictors of responsiveness to the messaging. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05442112
Study type Interventional
Source Johns Hopkins University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date June 11, 2023
Completion date May 11, 2024

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