Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06898593

Enhancing Engagement by Integrating Goals and Concerns That Matter to Patients

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,448 (estimated)
Sponsor
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if adding patients' goals and concerns to measurement-based collaborative care can tailor care and provide a more holistic view of treatment, thereby improving engagement in care among adult patients receiving collaborative care. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does using a clinical decision support system (which includes an enhanced pre-visit questionnaire and patient-level dashboard) improve patient engagement in the collaborative care model? * Does using a clinical decision support system improve patient and clinician satisfaction with care? Researchers will compare the enhanced collaborative care with traditional collaborative care. Patient participants will complete pre-visit questionnaires before their collaborative care appointments. Responses will be viewed by the clinician and/or patient in a visual dashboard inside the electronic health record.

Detailed description

Dartmouth Health (DH) has implemented the evidence-based Collaborative Care Model (CoCM) of integrated behavioral health in primary care. CoCM includes (a) an initial behavioral health assessment with validated patient-reported outcomes, including the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) scale, (b) joint care planning and treatment with pharmacotherapy and/or psychotherapy, (c) monitoring using a registry to track treatment and patient-reported outcomes, and (d) caseload review with a psychiatric consultant. There are several limitations associated with CoCM, including loss of patients between referral and treatment, failure to complete CoCM, and a limited ability to monitor for post-treatment relapse in depressive symptoms. These limitations are associated with low motivation to engage in BH services and patient perceptions that providers cannot accommodate their needs. The scientific premise of the project is that structured collection and use of personalized treatment goals and concerns will improve patient engagement with CoCM, extending service impact. This study will highlight patient priorities for healthcare services to the CoCM team and will overcome clinical translational science challenges associated with patients' goals and concerns being neither fully documented nor available to support care, improvement, and research. Enhancing patient-generated data collected through CoCM (e.g., PHQ-9; GAD-7) with patients' goals and concerns will reduce barriers to engagement in BH services by overcoming patient perceptions that services are misaligned with needs. Previous studies demonstrate that agenda setting processes that elicit priorities can improve clinicians' understanding of patients' concerns, increase patients' perceptions that what matters most is heard and incorporated into care plans, and increase likelihood of patients adhering to treatment recommendations. Clinicians and patient stakeholders will use human-centered co-design principles to (a) enhance the existing CoCM pre-visit questionnaire (PVQ) to capture patient-reported goals and concerns, and (b) build a patient-level clinical decision support system (CDSS) that visualizes PVQ responses and clinical information within the electronic health record (EHR) for in-visit use by clinicians and patients. PVQs will support the patient in defining their visit agenda and providing an opportunity to align care with their immediate psychosocial and clinical needs. PVQs will be configured in Epic's MyChart® patient portal, allowing for completion at home prior to the visit or with a tablet upon clinic check-in. PVQ responses will be directly imported via a smart phrase into a clinical note template that clinicians can edit during the visit, reducing documentation burden and complexity. The care plan will be based on joint clinician and patient input and be available to the patient in the patient portal after the visit. Intervention rollout will involve coaching CoCM care managers to use the CDSS following an established process. This will include a quality improvement curriculum to optimize use of the CDSS within clinical workflows and to incorporate patient preferences into decision-making. Training and support will be provided to care managers via monthly sessions informed by monitoring and feedback to assess and resolve challenges.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCollaborative care model with clinical decision support systemA new patient-level clinical decision support system (CDSS) will include enhancing the existing pre-visit questionnaire to capture patient-reported goals and concerns, and displaying pre-visit questionnaire responses and clinical information within a patient-level dashboard in the electronic health record (EHR) for use by clinicians and patients.
BEHAVIORALCollaborative care modelCollaborative care model of integrated behavioral health and primary care.

Timeline

Start date
2025-04-02
Primary completion
2027-06-30
Completion
2027-06-30
First posted
2025-03-27
Last updated
2025-08-21

Locations

6 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06898593. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.