Trials / Withdrawn
WithdrawnNCT03791580
Reducing High-Risk Geriatric Polypharmacy Via EHR Nudges: Pilot Phase
- Status
- Withdrawn
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 0 (actual)
- Sponsor
- RAND · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Polypharmacy is common among older adults in the United States and is associated with harms such as adverse drug reactions and higher costs of care. This pilot-phase project is designed to test two electronic health record (EHR)-based behavioral economic nudges to help primary care clinicians reduce the rate of high-risk polypharmacy among their older adult patients.
Detailed description
Polypharmacy increases the likelihood of being prescribed and harmed by high-risk medications. As noted in the 2014 National Action Plan for Adverse Drug Event (ADE) Prevention, polypharmacy both increases the likelihood of being prescribed high-risk medications and increases the likelihood that these high-risk medications will lead to adverse drug events. This pilot-phase study is intended to test clinicians' perceptions of EHR-based nudges designed to reduce high-risk polypharmacy among patients aged 65 years or more, thereby enabling investigators to refine the nudges, and to generate outcomes data that will inform power calculations for a subsequent larger study (the main study) of the nudges' effectiveness. In this pilot-phase study, the investigators will deploy 2 EHR-based behavioral nudges (a commitment nudge and a justification nudge) among 18 or more primary care clinicians in 3 primary care practices (6 clinicians or more per practice) affiliated with Northwestern University for approximately 4 months. The 3 practices participating in the pilot will be a convenience sample of Northwestern-affiliated practices known to study investigators. The investigators will randomly assign each of the 3 participating pilot practices to 1 of 3 arms: (1) commitment nudge, (2) justification nudge, or (3) both commitment and justification nudges. Randomization will be at the practice level, without replacement, thus assigning exactly 1 practice to each arm. All participating clinicians within a given practice will receive the same nudges. Northwestern-affiliated practices that do not participate in the pilot will constitute a fourth arm of this pilot study. The investigators will ask leaders of participating practices for their qualitative observations on how clinicians and patients experience the nudges (e.g., how the nudges affect workflows). The investigators also will collect data on the outcome measures before and during the approximately 4-month pilot period and compare these data to contemporaneous outcomes measures generated by Northwestern-affiliated practices that do not participate in the pilot.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Commitment nudge | The commitment nudge will ask clinicians to commit to discussing high-risk polypharmacy at the next office visit with patients who have high-risk polypharmacy. Clinicians who commit will receive a reminder just before the next office visit begins. The patient will also receive notification of the commitment via EHR patient portal. This nudge will be operationalized via two sequential clinician-facing EHR best practice alerts (BPAs): the first at time of opening any encounter (including encounters other than a face-to-face office visit, e.g., medication refills), and the second (contingent on making a commitment to discuss high-risk polypharmacy) at time of opening the subsequent encounter for a face-to-face office visit. Each of these BPAs will describe the specific high-risk polypharmacy criterion (or criteria) the patient meets, the specific harms associated with the medication(s) triggering the criterion/criteria, and lower-risk alternative treatment strategies. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Justification nudge | The justification nudge will ask clinicians who prescribe or renew a drug that meets high-risk polypharmacy criteria (in the context of the patient's other medications) to write a brief justification for prescribing this high-risk medication. This written justification will be recorded in the patient's medical record. The best practice alert requesting the justification will also describe the specific high-risk polypharmacy criterion (or criteria) the patient meets, the specific harms associated with the medication(s) triggering the criterion/criteria, and lower-risk alternative treatment strategies. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2019-02-01
- Primary completion
- 2019-08-01
- Completion
- 2019-09-01
- First posted
- 2019-01-02
- Last updated
- 2025-12-19
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03791580. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.