跨多个初级医疗机构的患者与医生沟通干预:集群随机临床试验。

IF 9.5 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES JAMA Health Forum Pub Date : 2024-12-06 DOI:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2024.4436
Ming Tai-Seale, Michael Cheung, Florin Vaida, Bernice Ruo, Amanda Walker, Rebecca L Rosen, Michael Hogarth, Kimberly A Fisher, Sonal Singh, Robert A Yood, Lawrence Garber, Cassandra Saphirak, Martina Li, Albert S Chan, Edward E Yu, Gene Kallenberg, Christopher A Longhurst, Marlene Millen, Cheryl D Stults, Kathleen M Mazor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重要性:尽管为改善患者与医生之间的沟通进行了各种尝试,但对这些尝试进行正面比较的情况却很有限:目的:评估临床医生指导(手机应用或面对面指导)是否比在检查室张贴提醒海报更有效,以及手机应用的使用是否不逊于面对面指导:群组随机临床试验,共分为 3 组。美国3个医疗系统共21家初级保健诊所参与了该试验;参与者为在2019年8月28日至2021年12月31日期间就诊的患者和初级保健临床医生。数据分析时间为 2022 年 8 月 4 日至 2024 年 11 月 10 日。数据分析基于意向治疗:通过标准化患者指导员培训对临床医生进行面对面指导(高接触)、基于移动应用程序的指导(高科技),以及在检查室张贴鼓励共同决策的海报(AskShareKnow [ASK])。在就诊前,高接触组和高科技组的患者会被提示通过在线签到告知临床医生最重要的讨论事项:主要结果和测量指标:主要结果是患者参与度测量指标(CollaboRATE),即患者对就诊期间沟通和共同决策的看法。分析采用差分混合效应回归法,并对初级保健临床医生进行随机截距。次要结果包括净促进者得分(患者向他人推荐该临床医生的可能性)和患者对管理自身健康的信心:参与者包括 4852 名患者,中位年龄为 54 岁(IQR,39-66 岁);63.6% 为女性。共有 114 名临床医生(年龄中位数为 40-59 岁;女性 48 名 [42.1%])参与了此次研究。3 种干预措施在 CollaboRATE 最高得分概率方面没有显著差异(边际差异,高科技 vs ASK,-0.021;95% CI,-0.073 至 0.030;高接触 vs ASK,-0.018,95% CI,-0.069 至 0.033;高科技 vs 高接触,-0.003,95% CI,-0.057 至 0.052;P = .14)。高科技组患者向他人推荐其临床医生的可能性低于高接触组患者(边际概率差异为-0.056;95% CI 为-0.118 至 0.019;P = .04)。3 个月后,高科技组患者在管理自己健康的信心方面的得分明显低于高接触组患者(平均差异为-0.176;95% CI 为-0.341 至-0.011;P = .04):这项分组随机临床试验没有发现干预效果的证据,尽管不同系统之间存在差异。一些次要结果表明,临床医生接受面对面指导具有积极作用。可能需要对患者参与度进行其他结果测量:试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:NCT03385512.
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Patient-Clinician Communication Interventions Across Multiple Primary Care Sites: A Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial.

Importance: Despite various attempts to improve patient-clinician communication, there has been limited head-to-head comparison of these efforts.

Objective: To assess whether clinician coaching (mobile application or in-person) is more effective than reminder posters in examination rooms and whether mobile app use is noninferior to in-person coaching.

Design, setting, and participants: A cluster randomized clinical trial with 3 arms. A total of 21 primary care clinics participated in 3 health systems in the US; participants were patients and primary care clinicians with clinic visits between August 28, 2019, and December 31, 2021. Data were analyzed from August 4, 2022, to November 10, 2024. Data analysis was based on intention to treat.

Interventions: In-person coaching of clinicians with standardized patient instructor training (high-touch), mobile application-based coaching (high-tech), and posters placed in examination rooms encouraging shared decision-making (AskShareKnow [ASK]). Before visits, patients in the high-touch and high-tech groups were prompted to inform their clinicians of the most important matter for discussion using online check-in.

Main outcomes and measures: The primary outcome was a patient engagement measure (CollaboRATE) of patient perceptions of communication and shared decision-making during the visit. Difference-in-differences mixed-effect regression with random intercepts for primary care clinician were used for analyses. Secondary outcomes included the net promoter score (patient's likelihood of recommending this clinician to others) and patient's confidence in managing their health.

Results: Participants included 4852 patients with a median age of 54 years (IQR, 39-66 years); 63.6% were women. A total of 114 clinicians (median age range, 40-59 years; 48 were women [42.1%]) participated. The 3 interventions did not differ significantly in probability of CollaboRATE top score (marginal difference, high-tech vs ASK, -0.021; 95% CI, -0.073 to 0.030; high-touch vs ASK, -0.018, 95% CI, -0.069 to 0.033; high-tech vs high-touch, -0.003, 95% CI, -0.057 to 0.052; P = .14). Patients in the high-tech group were less likely to recommend their clinician to others than patients in the high-touch group (difference in marginal probability, -0.056; 95% CI, -0.118 to 0.019; P = .04). After 3 months, patients in the high-tech group had a significantly lower score than patients in the high-touch group (mean difference, -0.176; 95% CI, -0.341 to -0.011; P = .04) in confidence in managing their health.

Conclusions and relevance: This cluster randomized clinical trial found no evidence of intervention effects, although there were differences across systems. Some secondary outcomes suggested positive effect of clinicians receiving in-person coaching. Alternative outcome measures of patient engagement may be needed.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03385512.

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期刊介绍: JAMA Health Forum is an international, peer-reviewed, online, open access journal that addresses health policy and strategies affecting medicine, health, and health care. The journal publishes original research, evidence-based reports, and opinion about national and global health policy. It covers innovative approaches to health care delivery and health care economics, access, quality, safety, equity, and reform. In addition to publishing articles, JAMA Health Forum also features commentary from health policy leaders on the JAMA Forum. It covers news briefs on major reports released by government agencies, foundations, health policy think tanks, and other policy-focused organizations. JAMA Health Forum is a member of the JAMA Network, which is a consortium of peer-reviewed, general medical and specialty publications. The journal presents curated health policy content from across the JAMA Network, including journals such as JAMA and JAMA Internal Medicine.
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