4.6 Article

Durable Improvements in Prostate Cancer Screening from Online Spaced Education A Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
Volume 39, Issue 5, Pages 472-478

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2010.07.016

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Veterans Affairs Health Services Research & Development Service [TEL-02-100, IIR-04-045]
  2. U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
  3. American Urological Association Foundation
  4. Astellas Pharma U.S., Inc.
  5. Wyeth, Inc.
  6. NIH [K24 DK63214, R01 HL77234]

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Context: Prostate cancer screening with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is frequently performed, counter to clinical practice guidelines. Background: It was hypothesized that an e-mail-based intervention termed spaced education could reduce clinicians' inappropriate screening for prostate cancer. Design: The study was conducted as an RCT. Setting/participants: The study involved 95 primary care clinicians in eight Veterans Affairs medical centers from January 2007 to February 2009. Intervention: Participants were randomized into two cohorts: spaced education clinicians received four isomorphic cycles of nine e-mails over 36 weeks (zero to two e-mails per week), whereas control clinicians received no intervention. Each e-mail presented a clinical scenario and asked whether it was appropriate to obtain a PSA test. Participants received immediate feedback after submitting their answers. Main outcome measures: The primary outcome was the number and percentage of inappropriate PSA screening tests ordered. Inappropriate testing was defined as use of PSA for prostate cancer screening in patients aged >76 or <40 years. Appropriateness of screening was dichotomized based on patient age at time of screening. Patients with PSA testing for non-screening reasons were excluded using a validated protocol. Logistic regression with adjustment for patient clustering by clinician was performed. Analyses were conducted in 2009. Results: During the intervention period (Weeks 1-36), clinicians receiving spaced education e-mails ordered significantly fewer inappropriate PSA screening tests than control clinicians (10.5% vs 14.2%, p=0.041). Over the 72-week period following the intervention (Weeks 37-108), spaced education clinicians continued to order fewer inappropriate tests compared to controls (7.8% vs 13.1%, respectively, p=0.011), representing a 40% relative reduction in inappropriate screening. Conclusions: Spaced education durably improves the prostate cancer screening behaviors of clinicians and represents a promising new methodology to improve patient care across healthcare systems. (Am J Prev Med 2010;39(5):472-478) Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of American Journal of Preventive Medicine

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