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Implementation of Evidence-Based Medicine in Primary Care Through the Use of Encounter Shared Decision Making Tools: The ShareEBM Pragmatic Trial

LeBlanc, A.; Branda, M. E.; Egginton, J.; Inselman, J.; Dick, S.; Schuerman, J.; Kemper, J.; Shah, N.; Montori, V.

2023-12-21 primary care research
10.1101/2023.12.19.23300235 medRxiv
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BACKGROUNDWhile decision aids have been proven effective to facilitate patient-centered discussion about evidence-based health information in practice and enable shared decision making (SDM), a chasm remains between the promise and the use of these SDM tools in practice. AIMSTo promote evidence-based patient-centered care in primary care by using encounter SDM tools for medication management of chronic conditions. METHODSWe conducted a mixed methods study centered around a practice-based, multi-centered pragmatic randomized trial comparing active implementation (active) to passive dissemination (passive) of a web-based toolkit, ShareEBM, to facilitate the uptake in primary care of four SDM tools designed for use during clinical encounters. These tools supported collaborative decisions about medications for chronic conditions. ShareEBM included activities and tactics to increase the likelihood that encounter SDM tools will be routinized in practice. Study team members worked closely with practices in the active arm to actively integrate and promote the use of SDM tools; passive arm practices received no support from the study team. The embedded qualitative evaluation included clinician phone interviews (n=10) and site observations (n=5) for active practices, and exit focus groups for all practices (n=11). RESULTSEleven practices and 62 clinicians participated in the study. Clinicians in the active arm used SDM tools in 621 encounters (Mean [SD]: 21 [25] encounters per clinician, range: 0-93) compared to 680 in the passive arm (Mean [SD]: 20 [40] encounters per clinician, range: 0-156, p=0.4). Six of 29 (21%) clinicians in the active arm and 14 of 33 (42%) in the passive arm did not use any tools (p=0.1). Clinicians views covered four major themes: general views of using encounter SDM tools, perceived impact on patients, strategies used, and how encounter SDM tools are incorporated into practice flow. CONCLUSIONNeither active nor passive implementation of a toolkit improved the uptake and use of encounter SDM tools in primary care. Overcoming clinician reluctance to consider using encounter SDM tools, their seamless integration into the electronic and practice workflows, and ongoing feedback about the quality of their use during encounters appear necessary to implement their use in primary care practices.

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