Adult Asthma Surveillance and Intervention in a Managed Care Setting
NCT ID: NCT00147810
Last Updated: 2006-03-24
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
6948 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2001-11-30
2004-07-31
Brief Summary
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2. To test the ability of an automated telephone outreach intervention to reduce health care utilization for acute asthma exacerbations and improve quality of life. The intervention used speech recognition technology to gather information about current asthma control, patterns of medication use, and recent acute health care utilization for asthma. This information allowed the intervention to provide tailored educational feedback and to flag patients deemed to be at high risk for future exacerbations so that they could be followed up by the health care system.
Detailed Description
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2. The telephone intervention study was conducted within KPNW. 6,948 eligible HMO members were identified from the electronic medical record (EMR). Individuals 18 or older were eligible for the study if they were either (1) on the KPNW high risk asthma registry or (2) had at least 180 days of anti-asthma medication dispensings and at least one medical contact for asthma during a specified two-year period. Excluded were 850 individuals who had COPD listed in the electronic medical record.
Eligible individuals were randomly assigned to either usual care (n=3,367) or telephone outreach (n=3,581); 192 members of the telephone outreach group were randomly selected to receive calls from a real person, while the remaining 3,389 received automated calls.
The intervention consisted of three rounds of calling, spaced \~five months apart. Calls consisted of a brief series of questions to assess (1) recent emergency department or hospital care without a follow-up visit, (2) current level of asthma control, (3) current patterns of asthma medication use, and (4) whether the member could identify a primary provider for asthma care. (Sel-identified COPD patients received an abbreviated intervention but were kept on the call list unless a diagnosis of COPD was subsequently added in thier EMR.)
Based on the responses to these initial questions, members were offered tailored feedback regarding their overall level of asthma control and use of asthma medications. Feedback was designed to convey a positive message and not be prescriptive. The call concluded with an offer to receive information about additional Kaiser Permanente (KP) resources (a toll-free health line and KP's online website for members), followed by an offer to call again in five months.
The calls were brief and lasted less than 10 minutes. Participants could refuse the tailored feedback. To maximize participation, calls were made using speech recognition (or speech enabled) technology, rather than requiring the respondent to respond by pushing buttons.
Automated and live person calls used identical scripts. Responses to the questions were computerized and used to generate different text messages that were entered into the electronic medical record and logged as telephone encounters. Members identified as being at high risk of a future acute exacerbation were brought to the attention of the system, ensuring that a clinician would have to physically review the encounter and initiate a follow-up contact with the patient.
Consistent with a standard intention to treat analysis, all randomized individuals were included in the analysis, even if they opted not to participate in the calls.
Primary outcomes of the study related to health care utilization, medication use, and quality of life. A secondary outcome was the extent to which the intervention could be successfully implemented, and the reaction to the intervention by patients and providers. Extensive process data was collected, including a survey of providers whose patients were enrolled in the intervention, mailed surveys to members, feedback from members obtained immediately following the third intervention call, and an audit of those charts where the encounter was left open to determine what, if any, follow-up occurred. Participation at each round of calling was also tracked.
Follow-up data was obtained from a survey of 1,583 randomly selected KPNW members one month following the final calling period and from an analysis of health care utilization data from the start of the initial calling until one month following the last round of calling. The response rate for the follow-up survey was 65% for both intervention participants and control participants.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Interventions
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Telephone outreach to enhance asthma care
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* On KPNW high-risk asthma registry
* At least 180 days of asthma medications dispensings
* At least one visit for asthma in previous 2 years
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Kaiser Permanente
OTHER
Principal Investigators
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William M Vollmer, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Kaiser Permanente
Locations
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Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research
Portland, Oregon, United States
Countries
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References
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Fuhlbrigge AL, Adams RJ, Guilbert TW, Grant E, Lozano P, Janson SL, Martinez F, Weiss KB, Weiss ST. The burden of asthma in the United States: level and distribution are dependent on interpretation of the national asthma education and prevention program guidelines. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2002 Oct 15;166(8):1044-9. doi: 10.1164/rccm.2107057.
Buchner DA, Butt LT, De Stefano A, Edgren B, Suarez A, Evans RM. Effects of an asthma management program on the asthmatic member: patient-centered results of a 2-year study in a managed care organization. Am J Manag Care. 1998 Sep;4(9):1288-97.
Lieu TA, Capra AM, Quesenberry CP, Mendoza GR, Mazar M. Computer-based models to identify high-risk adults with asthma: is the glass half empty of half full? J Asthma. 1999 Jun;36(4):359-70. doi: 10.3109/02770909909068229.
Vollmer WM, Markson LE, O'Connor E, Frazier EA, Berger M, Buist AS. Association of asthma control with health care utilization: a prospective evaluation. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2002 Jan 15;165(2):195-9. doi: 10.1164/ajrccm.165.2.2102127.
Corkrey R, Parkinson L. Interactive voice response: review of studies 1989-2000. Behav Res Methods Instrum Comput. 2002 Aug;34(3):342-53. doi: 10.3758/bf03195462.
Kaplan B, Farzanfar R, Friedman RH. Personal relationships with an intelligent interactive telephone health behavior advisor system: a multimethod study using surveys and ethnographic interviews. Int J Med Inform. 2003 Aug;71(1):33-41. doi: 10.1016/s1386-5056(03)00072-8.
Lavigne JV, Tapper K. Interactive voice response in disease management: Providing patient outreach and improving outcomes. Rochester:2000, pp 40-57.
Krishna S, Balas EA, Boren SA, Maglaveras N. Patient acceptance of educational voice messages: a review of controlled clinical studies. Methods Inf Med. 2002;41(5):360-9.
Other Identifiers
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CDC/ACHP 200-95-0953-48
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: secondary_id
CASHEW 200-95-0953-48
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id