Impact of an Electronic Health Record-Based Interruptive Alert Among Patients With Headaches Seen in Primary Care: Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 MEDICAL INFORMATICS
Apoorva Pradhan, Eric A Wright, Vanessa A Hayduk, Juliana Berhane, Mallory Sponenberg, Leeann Webster, Hannah Anderson, Siyeon Park, Jove Graham, Scott Friedenberg
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Headaches, including migraines, are one of the most common causes of disability and account for nearly 20%-30% of referrals from primary care to neurology. In primary care, electronic health record-based alerts offer a mechanism to influence health care provider behaviors, manage neurology referrals, and optimize headache care.

Objective: This project aimed to evaluate the impact of an electronic alert implemented in primary care on patients' overall headache management.

Methods: We conducted a stratified cluster-randomized study across 38 primary care clinic sites between December 2021 to December 2022 at a large integrated health care delivery system in the United States. Clinics were stratified into 6 blocks based on region and patient-to-health care provider ratios and then 1:1 randomized within each block into either the control or intervention. Health care providers practicing at intervention clinics received an interruptive alert in the electronic health record. The primary end point was a change in headache burden, measured using the Headache Impact Test 6 scale, from baseline to 6 months. Secondary outcomes included changes in headache frequency and intensity, access to care, and resource use. We analyzed the difference-in-differences between the arms at follow-up at the individual patient level.

Results: We enrolled 203 adult patients with a confirmed headache diagnosis. At baseline, the average Headache Impact Test 6 scores in each arm were not significantly different (intervention: mean 63, SD 6.9; control: mean 61.8, SD 6.6; P=.21). We observed a significant reduction in the headache burden only in the intervention arm at follow-up (3.5 points; P=.009). The reduction in the headache burden was not statistically different between groups (difference-in-differences estimate -1.89, 95% CI -5 to 1.31; P=.25). Similarly, secondary outcomes were not significantly different between groups. Only 11.32% (303/2677) of alerts were acted upon.

Conclusions: The use of an interruptive electronic alert did not significantly improve headache outcomes. Low use of alerts by health care providers prompts future alterations of the alert and exploration of alternative approaches.

基于电子健康记录的中断警报对基层医疗机构头痛患者的影响:分组随机对照试验》。
背景:头痛(包括偏头痛)是导致残疾的最常见原因之一,占初级保健向神经内科转诊的近 20%-30%。在初级保健中,基于电子健康记录的警报提供了一种机制来影响医疗服务提供者的行为、管理神经科转诊并优化头痛护理:本项目旨在评估基层医疗机构实施电子警报对患者整体头痛管理的影响:我们于 2021 年 12 月至 2022 年 12 月在美国一家大型综合医疗保健服务系统的 38 个初级保健诊所开展了一项分层分组随机研究。根据地区和患者与医疗服务提供者的比例,将诊所分为 6 个区块,然后在每个区块内按 1:1 随机分配到对照组或干预组。在干预诊所执业的医疗服务提供者会收到电子健康记录中的中断警报。主要终点是头痛负担从基线到 6 个月的变化,采用头痛影响测试 6 量表进行测量。次要结果包括头痛频率和强度的变化、获得护理的机会以及资源使用情况。我们分析了随访时两组患者在个体水平上的差异:我们招募了 203 名确诊头痛的成年患者。基线时,各组的头痛影响测试 6 平均得分无显著差异(干预组:平均 63 分,标准差 6.9 分;对照组:平均 61.8 分,标准差 6.6 分;P=.21)。我们观察到,只有干预组在随访时头痛负担明显减轻(3.5 分;P=.009)。各组间头痛负担的减轻程度并无统计学差异(差异估计值-1.89,95% CI -5至1.31;P=.25)。同样,各组之间的次要结果也没有明显差异。只有 11.32% 的警报(303/2677)被执行:结论:使用中断性电子警报并不能明显改善头痛的治疗效果。医疗服务提供者对警报的使用率较低,这促使他们在未来改变警报并探索其他方法。
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来源期刊
JMIR Medical Informatics
JMIR Medical Informatics Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
3.10%
发文量
173
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR Medical Informatics (JMI, ISSN 2291-9694) is a top-rated, tier A journal which focuses on clinical informatics, big data in health and health care, decision support for health professionals, electronic health records, ehealth infrastructures and implementation. It has a focus on applied, translational research, with a broad readership including clinicians, CIOs, engineers, industry and health informatics professionals. Published by JMIR Publications, publisher of the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR), the leading eHealth/mHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175), JMIR Med Inform has a slightly different scope (emphasizing more on applications for clinicians and health professionals rather than consumers/citizens, which is the focus of JMIR), publishes even faster, and also allows papers which are more technical or more formative than what would be published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
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