domingo, 16 de diciembre de 2012

Electronic tools to assist with identificat... [J Gen Intern Med. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI

Electronic tools to assist with identificat... [J Gen Intern Med. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI

J Gen Intern Med. 2012 Aug;27(8):933-9. doi: 10.1007/s11606-012-2022-8. Epub 2012 Mar 9.

Electronic tools to assist with identification and counseling for overweight patients: a randomized controlled trial.

Source

Division of General Internal Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 750 N. Lake Shore Drive, 9th floor, Chicago, IL 60611, USA. Joyce-tang@northwestern.edu

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Physicians often do not recognize when their patients are overweight and infrequently counsel them about weight loss.

OBJECTIVE:

To evaluate a set of electronic health record (EHR)-embedded tools to assist with identification and counseling of overweight patients.

DESIGN:

Randomized controlled trial.

PARTICIPANTS:

Physicians at an academic general internal medicine clinic were randomized to activation of the EHR tools (n = 15) or to usual care (n = 15). Patients of these physicians were included in analyses if they had a body mass index (BMI) between 27 and 29.9 kg/m(2).

INTERVENTION:

The EHR tool set included: a physician point-of-care alert for overweight (BMI 27-29. 9 kg/m(2)); a counseling template to help physicians counsel patients on action plans; and an order set to facilitate entry of overweight as a diagnosis and to order relevant patient handouts.

MAIN MEASURES:

Physician documentation of overweight as a problem; documentation of weight-specific counseling; physician perceptions of the EHR tools; patient self-reported progress toward their goals and perspectives about counseling received.

KEY RESULTS:

Patients of physicians receiving the intervention were more likely than those of usual care physicians to receive a diagnosis of overweight (22% vs. 7%; p = 0.02) and weight-specific counseling (27% vs. 15%; p = 0.02). Most patients receiving counseling in the intervention group reported increased motivation to lose weight (90%) and taking steps toward their goal (93%). Most intervention physicians agreed that the tool alerted them to patients they did not realize were overweight (91%) and improved the effectiveness of their counseling (82%); more than half (55%) reported counseling overweight patients more frequently (55%). However, most physicians used the tool infrequently because of time barriers.

CONCLUSIONS:

EHR-based alerts and management tools increased documentation of overweight and counseling frequency; the majority of patients for whom the tools were used reported short-term behavior change.

PMID:
22402982
[PubMed - in process]
PMCID:
PMC3403149
[Available on 2013/8/1]

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