Study Results
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Basic Information
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WITHDRAWN
NA
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-12-31
2025-04-30
Brief Summary
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Patient Priorities Care (PPC)
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Detailed Description
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Patient priorities care (PPC) is an innovative solution to address the discrepancy between the care older adults with MCC receive and the outcomes they want. When faced with tradeoffs between desired QOL outcomes and health care options that can increase treatment burden, individuals vary in their health priorities. Patients' health priorities include both their health outcome goals and their health care preferences. Health outcome goals are the personal health and life outcomes that patients hope to achieve through their health care (i.e., function, survival, social activities, or symptom relief). To inform clinical decision-making, health outcome goals should be specific, measurable, actionable, realistic, and time-bound (SMART) and aligned with what matters most to patients (patients' values). The overall goal is to evaluate effectiveness and implementation of PPC- an approach to clinical decision-making that is used by patients' existing clinical care team members, in North Carolina. The feasibility and efficacy of this approach has previously been demonstrated in a large primary care practice in Connecticut.
The investigators will randomize 20 primary care clinicians to PPC-NC or usual care (UC). Clinicians randomized to UC will not receive the PPC-NC intervention.
The PPC process begins when a 'facilitator' (i.e. an individual with motivational interviewing skills) meets with the patient and helps patients identify their value-based priorities during a structured conversation. Values, which represent what matters most to individuals, tend to remain stable over time and form the basis of patients' health outcome goals. Patients' values are clarified using questions such as "What would make your life not worth living if you were unable to do it?" and "What would you like to be able to do that you cannot do now?" Based on these values, the facilitator helps patients identify their health outcome goals, which are the specific, measurable, actionable, and realistic, and time-bound health and life outcomes (e.g. walk ½ mile daily to visit grandchildren) that patients hope to achieve through their health care, given their care preferences. Care preferences refer to the health care activities (e.g., medications, self-management tasks, health care visits, testing, and procedures) that patients are or are not willing and able to do to achieve their health outcome goals. After the facilitator identifies' the patients' health care priorities, the clinician will work to align clinical decision-making around those priorities during routine clinic visits. This can be manifested by stopping, starting, or continuing therapies in response to knowing the patients' priorities. Patients' priorities will be communicated between care team members via the electronic health record (EHR).
The facilitator and clinicians will be trained in the PPC approach with an initial training, followed by ongoing support from the research team, using quality improvement principles. The investigators will collect the following practice-level data for both PPC-NC and UC clinicians: number of patients, number of encounters, number and type of clinicians, payer mix, and patient demographics of the practices (age, sex, race/ethnicity). The investigators will also collect: socio-demographic factors (age, sex, race/ethnicity, educational level, living arrangement, and marital status), subjective social status, health literacy, and cognitive impairment. A research assistant will collect all patient-reported survey data using the web-based application REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) three times over a one year period (baseline, 6 months later, and 12 months post baseline. The investigators will use mixed effects models to compare the primary and secondary patient-reported outcomes between PPC-NC and UC clinicians.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Intervention Arm - Implementing Patient Priorities Care
Practice staff and providers will be trained on how to identify patient health priorities. Staff and clinicians will implement Patient Priorities Care, document priorities in EHRs, and align patient priorities with health care decisions.
Patient Priorities Care
Patients will participate in a structured conversation in which the facilitator (i.e. social worker) helps patients identify their health goals, measurable, actionable, realistic outcomes (e.g. walk ½ mile daily). Both practice and patient level data will be collected.
Control Arm
Control arm practices will receive no intervention and patients will receive usual care.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Patient Priorities Care
Patients will participate in a structured conversation in which the facilitator (i.e. social worker) helps patients identify their health goals, measurable, actionable, realistic outcomes (e.g. walk ½ mile daily). Both practice and patient level data will be collected.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Multiple chronic conditions (presence of greater than 2 active health problems) AND either prescribed more than 10 medications or visits to more than two specialists (excluding gynecologists and ophthalmologists) over the past year or have had at least one hospitalization over the past two years
3. Medicare or Medicare-Medicaid eligibility
4. English speaking
5. Current patient with a participating clinician
Exclusion Criteria
2. End stage renal disease on dialysis
3. Nursing home residence
4. Inability to independently provide informed consent due to dementia or severe psychiatric illness (based on ICD-10 codes or clinician input)
55 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Yale University
OTHER
North Carolina Translational and Clinical Sciences Institute
OTHER
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
NIH
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Crystal Cené, MD, MPH
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Locations
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UNC Primary Care of Cary
Cary, North Carolina, United States
UNC Family Medicine at Panther Creek
Cary, North Carolina, United States
UNC Internal Medicine at Panther Creek
Cary, North Carolina, United States
UNC Internal Medicine at Goldsboro
Goldsboro, North Carolina, United States
UNC Primary Care at Kenly
Kenly, North Carolina, United States
Countries
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References
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Tinetti ME, Naik AD, Dindo L, Costello DM, Esterson J, Geda M, Rosen J, Hernandez-Bigos K, Smith CD, Ouellet GM, Kang G, Lee Y, Blaum C. Association of Patient Priorities-Aligned Decision-Making With Patient Outcomes and Ambulatory Health Care Burden Among Older Adults With Multiple Chronic Conditions: A Nonrandomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Intern Med. 2019 Dec 1;179(12):1688-1697. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2019.4235.
Related Links
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Website for Patient Priorities Care
Other Identifiers
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19-2380
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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