4.1 Article

Design of Behavioral Economic Applications to Geriatrics Leveraging Electronic Health Records (BEAGLE): A pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial

Journal

CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL TRIALS
Volume 112, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2021.106649

Keywords

Overuse; Behavioral economics; Electronic health records; Prostate cancer screening; Diabetes mellitus; Urinary tract infections

Funding

  1. National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health [R33AG057383]
  2. Feinberg School of Medicine by the Northwestern University Clinical and Translational Science (NUCATS) Institute
  3. National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR001422]

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This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of behavioral-economics-informed clinical decision support interventions in reducing overtesting and overtreatment in older adults. Conducted as a parallel arm, pragmatic cluster-randomized trial, the study focuses on three co-primary outcomes including PSA screening, urine testing, and diabetes overtreatment in primary care clinics. The trial has achieved adequate balance between study arms and aims to assess the safety and effectiveness of these interventions in reducing overuse of specific tests and treatments for older adults.
Background: Overtesting and treatment of older patients is common and may lead to harms. The Choosing Wisely campaign has provided recommendations to reduce overtesting and overtreatment of older adults. Behavioral economics-informed interventions embedded within the electronic health record (EHR) have been shown to reduce overuse in several areas. Our objective is to conduct a parallel arm, pragmatic cluster-randomized trial to evaluate the effectiveness of behavioral-economics-informed clinical decision support (CDS) interventions previously piloted in primary care clinics and designed to reduce overtesting and overtreatment in older adults. Methods/Design: This trial has two parallel arms: clinician education alone vs. clinician education plus behavioral-economics-informed CDS. There are three co-primary outcomes for this trial: (1) prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening in older men, (2) urine testing for non-specific reasons in older women, and (3) overtreatment of diabetes in older adults. All eligible primary care clinics from a large regional health system were randomized using a modified constrained randomization process and their attributed clinicians were included. Clinicians were recruited to complete a survey and educational module. We randomized 60 primary care clinics with 374 primary care clinicians and achieved adequate balance between the study arms for prespecified constrained variables. Baseline annual overuse rates for the three co-primary outcomes were 25%, 23%, and 17% for the PSA, urine, and diabetes measures, respectively. Discussion: This trial is evaluating behavioral-economics-informed EHR-embedded interventions to reduce overuse of specific tests and treatments for older adults. The study will evaluate the effectiveness and safety of these interventions.

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