Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Trial Comparing "Push" Versus "Pull" Technology for Mobilizing Pain Evidence Into Practice Across Different Health Professions
Pain is a problem for many Canadians. Unfortunately, many doctors, nurses, therapists, and psychologists have trouble keeping up to date and applying the latest research that might help patients suffering with pain. This study will determine whether sending alerts about new pain research directly to these health professionals, and providing them with access to accumulated alerts, will help. The study will compare knowledge and decisions made by health professionals about managing pain problems. The investigators will compare physicians, nurses, rehab therapists and psychologists at the beginning of the study and after having access to different ways to find out about new pain research. One group will receive alerts about new pain studies that have been found to be high quality and relevant to patient care, and will be able to search the alerts database. The other group will be able to find the same studies,but must go to the database of research studies to locate them. The investigators will include 670 doctors, nurses, rehab therapists, and psychologists in this study. A process like tossing a coin will determine which way they are able to get pain research information. The investigators will monitor how much information they access and how they apply it to managing pain problems. The investigators expect that reminding health care providers about new research findings directly will help them, since difficulty finding studies and lack of time prevent them from using the latest research. The investigators expect that reminders about the latest research will help them make better decisions about caring for patients' pain.
The Problem: Pain affects all Canadians during acute injury or disease. Chronic noncancer
pain affects 29% of Canadians, half of whom are unable to participate in their usual
work/social roles. Pain is the primary reason that patients consult health practitioners.
Research has shown the benefits, harms, and costs of numerous interventions for pain, but
uptake of this knowledge is far from satisfactory. Optimizing pain care requires ready
access and use of best evidence within and across different disciplines and settings.
The Research Question: The purpose of this randomized trial is to determine whether a
technology-based "push" of new, high-quality pain research to physicians, nurses,
rehabilitation and psychology professionals results in better knowledge and clinical
decision-making around pain, when offered in addition to traditional "pull" evidence
technology. A secondary objective is to identify disciplinary variations in response to
evidence and differences in the patterns of accessing research evidence.
The Study Sample: 670 Physicians, nurses, occupational/physical therapists and psychologists
((80/group X 2 comparison groups X 4 disciplines) + 30 for dropouts)will be recruited
through professional associations, websites/conferences and social media. This provides >
90% power to detect main effects; 80% power for subgroup effects.
Outcome Measures: The primary outcomes are uptake and application of evidence. Uptake will
be determined by embedded tracking of what research is accessed during use of the
intervention. A random subset of 30 participants/discipline will undergo chart-stimulated
recall (CSR) to assess the nature and depth of evidence utilization in actual case
management (0, 9 months). A different random subset of 30 participants/discipline will be
tested for their skills in accessing evidence using a standardized simulation test (final 3
months). Secondary outcomes include usage and self-reported evidence-based practice
attitudes and behaviours (0, 3, 9, 15, 18 months).
Intervention/Methods: Participants who agree to this study of a free literature service will
be randomly allocated to Push + Pull versus Pull evidence support. Push + Pull is evidence
on pain that is extracted from medical, nursing and rehabilitation journals and appraised
for quality and relevance and sent out to clinicians (derived from the successful
MacPLUS/Evidence Updates), delivered by e-mail alerts or available for searches of the
accumulated database). Pull will be an intervention with a similar front-face but requires
clinicians to go to the site and extract evidence from an electronic database. The trial
will begin with a 3-month (repeated) baseline, during which average participant use of the
standard PULL resource will be monitored. Participants will then be randomly allocated to
receive PUSH + PULL or continue to use the PULL resource. After six months, participants
will cross over to the alternate intervention for an additional six months. To complete the
trial, both groups will finish with three months of PUSH + PULL access.
Analyses: The investigators will use an analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), where discipline
and setting are covariates to assess differential responses across main effects of Push +
Pull vs. Pull. Content analysis of the CSR interview will be use to describe the application
of evidence within actual cases.
Impact/Timeliness: The trial will inform our understanding on information preferences and
behaviours across disciplines/practice settings. If this intervention is effective,
sustained support will come through professional/health system initiatives emerging to
optimize pain management in Canada.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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