Encouraging Flu Vaccination Among High-Risk Patients Identified by ML
NCT ID: NCT04323137
Last Updated: 2024-12-30
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
117649 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-09-21
2021-09-21
Brief Summary
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1. Evaluate the effect on flu vaccination rates of informing health-system patients who are identified by an ML analysis of EHR data to be at high risk for flu complications that they are at high risk with either (a) no additional explanation, (b) an explanation that this determination comes from an analysis of their medical records, and (c) the additional explanation that an AI or ML algorithm made this determination.
2. Evaluate the effects of the same three interventions on diagnoses of flu in the same patients.
Detailed Description
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On average, 8% of the US population gets sick from flu each flu season (Tokars et al. 2018). Since 2010, the annual disease burden of influenza has included 9-45 million illnesses, 140,000-810,000 hospitalizations, and 12,000-61,000 deaths (CDC 2020). The CDC recommends the flu vaccination to everyone aged 6+ months, with rare exception; almost anyone can benefit from the vaccine, which can reduce illnesses, missed work, hospitalizations, and death (CDC 2019a). Flu vaccination will be especially important for high-risk patients during the COVID-19 pandemic so that flu cases are reduced and resources conserved.
While most recover from influenza without treatment, the elderly, those with comorbidities, and other high-risk individuals can experience complications such as pneumonia, other respiratory illness, and death. Geisinger, a large health system in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, has partnered with Medial EarlySign (Medial; www.earlysign.com) to develop a machine learning (ML) algorithm to identify patients at risk for serious (moderate to severe) flu-associated complications on the basis of their existing electronic health record (EHR) data. Geisinger will deploy this system during the 2020-21 flu season and contact the identified patients with special messages (in addition to standard efforts made by the health system every flu season) to encourage vaccination. Flu vaccination will be especially important for high-risk patients during the COVID-19 pandemic so that flu cases are reduced and resources conserved.
Published results suggest Medial's ML systems identify high-risk patients in other contexts (Goshen et al., 2018; Zack et al., 2019). However, there is little evidence about (a) whether informing patients they are at high risk makes them more likely to receive vaccination; (b) how patients react to being told their risk status is the result of an analysis of their health records; and (c) whether informing patients their risk status has been determined by an "algorithm," by "machine learning," and/or by "artificial intelligence" will increase or decrease their likelihood of getting vaccinated. This study will address these gaps in the literature, which are especially important in light of the anticipated future growth of AI/ML system use throughout healthcare.
Medial's algorithm is an example of how interoperable health information exchange (HIE)-the ability for health information technology to share patient data-can improve the efficiency and effectiveness of healthcare. However, patients may not appreciate these benefits or the fact that healthcare has become substantially more integrated and collaborative. A systematic review of patient privacy concerns about HIE found that 15-74% of patients expressed privacy concerns, depending on the study, and concluded that patient perspectives remain poorly understood. A flu outreach message that explicitly references a review of patient medical records might backfire as patients react badly to a sense they have lost control of their health records.
There is conflicting evidence on how people respond to advice or information that comes from an algorithm or machine. Dietvorst et al. (2015) documented a pattern of "algorithm aversion," in which people choose inferior human over superior algorithmic forecasts, especially after they observed the algorithm make an error. In contrast, Logg et al. (2018) described "algorithm appreciation," in which people followed advice more when they thought it came from algorithms than when they thought it came from human beings. Finally, Bigman and Gray (2019) found aversion to algorithms that make "moral decisions," including a (fictitious) medical decision of choosing whether or not to operate on a high-risk patient. In the current setting, the algorithm is merely advising patients on taking an action (an annual flu shot) that is already the standard of care, and there is no opportunity to observe an erroneous recommendation, so the hypothesis is that "algorithm appreciation" will cause people to react positively to being informed of the algorithm's role. Thus, this study will address two important research questions:
1. Does informing patients that they are at high risk for flu complications (a) increase the likelihood that they will receive flu vaccine; and (b) decrease the likelihood that they receive diagnoses of flu and/or flu-like symptoms in the ensuing flu season?
2. Does informing patients that their high-risk status was determined (a) by analyzing their medical records (vs. by no specified method); and (b) by an AI/ML algorithm\* analyzing their medical records (as opposed to via unspecified methods or human medical records analysis) affect the likelihood that they receive the flu vaccine and/or diagnoses of flu and/or flu-like symptoms in the ensuing flu season?
Our specific aims are:
1. Evaluate the effect on flu vaccination rates of informing health-system patients who are identified by an ML analysis of EHR data to be at high-risk for flu complications that they are at high risk with either (a) no additional explanation, (b) an explanation that this determination comes from an analysis of their medical records, and (c) the additional explanation that an AI or ML algorithm made this determination.
2. Evaluate the effects of the same three interventions on diagnoses of flu in the same patients.
Research Strategy
Included in the study will be current Geisinger patients 17+ years of age with one or more visits to a Geisinger primary care physician (PCP) between January 1, 2008 and January 30, 2020 and no contraindications for flu vaccine. Medial will provide flu-complication risk scores from their ML algorithm (based on coded EHR data), on the basis of which the top 10% of patients at highest risk will be included. Based on prior behavior and other predictors in a second ML model, Medial will also provide the likelihood each patient will get vaccinated during the study flu season; these values and the primary risk scores will be used as covariates in exploratory data analyses. The anticipated number of patients in the top 10% of risk is 56,000.
On average in the last 3 flu seasons, 55% of Geisinger patients aged 65+ are vaccinated each season, so we will use this as a proxy base rate for a control condition in our power analysis. The study will have 92% power to detect a 2% absolute difference or greater in the vaccination outcome between conditions (55% vs 57%, two-tailed alpha of .05), on the assumption that each condition will have 56,000/4=14,000 patients. For the rarer outcome of flu diagnosis, we have 95% power to detect a 0.8% absolute difference or greater-from an estimated 3.9% rate in this high-risk population (based on the CDC estimate for people age 65+ \[Tokars et al., 2018\]) to a 3.1% rate.
The primary study outcomes will be the rates of flu vaccination and flu diagnoses during the 2020-21 season (September-March) by targeted patients. Secondary, exploratory outcomes will also be measured: Rates of flu vaccination and diagnoses by fellow household members of targeted patients; rates of flu vaccination and diagnoses by non-targeted patients who were assigned a risk score that fell just below the cutoff of targeted patients ("sub-threshold risk"); rates of flu complications and flu-like symptoms among targeted patients, household members, and those at sub-threshold risk; and rates of other relevant healthcare utilization outcomes such as ER visits and hospitalizations.
Generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) will examine the primary study outcomes as a function of the study arms (between-subjects), with patient-visited PCPs and/or clinics included as random effects variables, assuming high intraclass correlation coefficients. GLMMs will specify a binary distribution and log-link function in the case of dichotomous outcome variables (e.g., flu vaccination, flu diagnosis), and a negative binomial distribution and log-link function in the case of any highly positively skewed count variables such as ER visits and hospitalizations (where over-dispersion typically remains in the case of a Poisson distribution model). For these exploratory analyses, within-patient change (from the same period one year earlier) will also be analyzed. Also, each patient will receive the same type of communication (a/b/c/d) via up to three modalities-printed letter to their mailing address, SMS to their mobile phone, and/or secure message via Geisinger's patient portal-depending on what information is on file for each patient. The communication channels used for each patient will be covariates in later analyses.
\*Note: The study will not necessarily use the terms "AI," "ML," or "algorithm" in the messages to groups b, c, and d; instead, these messages will be designed to be readable and comprehensible by the patient audience while still including the key concepts that differentiate the interventions from one another.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
1. Control: group that receives no additional pro-vaccination intervention beyond Geisinger's normal efforts.
2. High Risk Only: group that receives messages telling them they have been identified to be at high risk for flu complications without specifying how/why Geisinger believes this to be the case
3. High Risk Based on Medical Records: group that receives messages telling them they have been identified to be at high risk for flu complications via analysis of their medical records
4. High Risk Based on Algorithm: group that receives messages telling them they have been identified to be at high risk for flu complications via analysis of their medical records by AI/ML
Two additional groups will be monitored for outcome data:
5. Sub-threshold patients: patients who are in the top 11-20% of risk
6. Household members: patients who share an address with target patients
PREVENTION
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Control
This group receives no additional pro-vaccination intervention beyond the health system's normal efforts. Although some patients are currently targeted for flu vaccination encouragement due to a non-ML assessment that they are at high risk for complications, these patients are not told that they are at high risk or that they have been targeted.
No interventions assigned to this group
High risk only
This group receives messages telling them they have been identified to be at high risk for flu complications without specifying how or why the health system believes this to be the case.
Risk reduction
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
High risk based on medical records
This group receives messages telling them they have been identified to be at high risk for flu complications via analysis of their medical records.
Risk reduction
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
Medical records-based recommendation
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
High risk based on algorithm
This group receives messages telling them they have been identified to be at high risk for flu complications via analysis of their medical records by an AI/ML system.
Risk reduction
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
Medical records-based recommendation
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
Algorithm-based recommendation
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
Sub-threshold patients
Patients in this group is in the top 11-20% of risk for flu and complications, slightly lower risk than those included in the intervention, who are in the top 10% of risk for flu and complications. This group of patients does not receive an intervention, but are monitored for flu shots as a comparison to target patients.
No interventions assigned to this group
Household members
This group of patients share an address with target high-risk patients (in arms 1-4). This group does not receive an intervention but is monitored for spillover effects of the intervention.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Risk reduction
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
Medical records-based recommendation
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
Algorithm-based recommendation
Mailed letter, SMS, and/or patient portal message
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Falls in the top 10% of patients at highest risk, as identified by the flu-complication risk scores of Medial's machine learning algorithm (which operates on coded EHR data)
* May limit inclusion to patients that are under Geisinger primary care, depending on algorithm performance of patients who have non-Geisinger PCPs
Exclusion Criteria
* Has opted out of receiving communications from Geisinger via all of the modalities being tested
17 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute on Aging (NIA)
NIH
Geisinger Clinic
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Christopher F Chabris, PhD
Faculty Co-Director, Behavioral Insights Team
Principal Investigators
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Christopher Chabris, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Geisinger Clinic
Locations
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Geisinger
Danville, Pennsylvania, United States
Countries
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References
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Bigman YE, Gray K. People are averse to machines making moral decisions. Cognition. 2018 Dec;181:21-34. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2018.08.003. Epub 2018 Aug 11.
Dietvorst BJ, Simmons JP, Massey C. Algorithm aversion: people erroneously avoid algorithms after seeing them err. J Exp Psychol Gen. 2015 Feb;144(1):114-26. doi: 10.1037/xge0000033. Epub 2014 Nov 17.
Goshen R, Choman E, Ran A, Muller E, Kariv R, Chodick G, Ash N, Narod S, Shalev V. Computer-Assisted Flagging of Individuals at High Risk of Colorectal Cancer in a Large Health Maintenance Organization Using the ColonFlag Test. JCO Clin Cancer Inform. 2018 Dec;2:1-8. doi: 10.1200/CCI.17.00130.
Logg, J.M., Minson, J.A., & Moore, D.A. (2019). Algorithm appreciation: People prefer algorithmic to human judgment. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 151, 90-103. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.obhdp.2018.12.005
Shen N, Bernier T, Sequeira L, Strauss J, Silver MP, Carter-Langford A, Wiljer D. Understanding the patient privacy perspective on health information exchange: A systematic review. Int J Med Inform. 2019 May;125:1-12. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2019.01.014. Epub 2019 Feb 1.
Rothberg MB, Haessler SD. Complications of seasonal and pandemic influenza. Crit Care Med. 2010 Apr;38(4 Suppl):e91-7. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e3181c92eeb.
Tokars JI, Olsen SJ, Reed C. Seasonal Incidence of Symptomatic Influenza in the United States. Clin Infect Dis. 2018 May 2;66(10):1511-1518. doi: 10.1093/cid/cix1060.
Turner D, Wailoo A, Nicholson K, Cooper N, Sutton A, Abrams K. Systematic review and economic decision modelling for the prevention and treatment of influenza A and B. Health Technol Assess. 2003;7(35):iii-iv, xi-xiii, 1-170. doi: 10.3310/hta7350.
WHO Guidelines for Pharmacological Management of Pandemic Influenza A(H1N1) 2009 and Other Influenza Viruses. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2010 Feb. Available from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK138515/
Zack CJ, Senecal C, Kinar Y, Metzger Y, Bar-Sinai Y, Widmer RJ, Lennon R, Singh M, Bell MR, Lerman A, Gulati R. Leveraging Machine Learning Techniques to Forecast Patient Prognosis After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. JACC Cardiovasc Interv. 2019 Jul 22;12(14):1304-1311. doi: 10.1016/j.jcin.2019.02.035. Epub 2019 Jun 26.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2020). Disease Burden of Influenza. https://www.cdc.gov/flu/ about/burden/index.html (Jan 10).
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2019a). Who Needs a Flu Vaccine and When. https://www.cdc.gov/flu/prevent/vaccinations.htm (Oct 11).
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2019b). Flu Vaccination Coverage, United States, 2018-19 Influenza Season. https://www.cdc .gov/flu/fluvaxview/coverage-1819estimates.htm
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol
Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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2020-0290
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id