Stroke
Conditions
Brief summary
The purpose of this study is to find out which types of written stroke messages may help high risk stroke patients take action to improve their health.
Detailed description
In this project, the investigators will draw on the science that has provided a foundation for behavioral economics as a guide to activation interventions. Specifically, the investigators will use the MINDSPACE framework that was created by some of the founders of behavioral economics. That framework details nine approaches to behavioral activation that have particularly solid evidence bases. Two of these, salience and incentives, the investigative team identified as most promising and practical for stroke activation. Aims: 1. Use electronic health record data to construct Framingham stroke risk scores in both Richard L. Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Eskenazi Health System. 2. Conduct iterative testing with high risk stroke patients from both health systems to refine two different stroke risk messages based on the behavioral strategies of salience and incentives. 3. Conduct a randomized trial of four mailed stroke risk messages, comparing the impact on patient activation of: 1) a standard stroke risk message, 2) a salience-focused stroke risk message, 3) an incentive-focused stroke risk message, and 4) a salience plus incentive message. 4. Compare the proportion in each messaging group that completes a stroke risk factor relevant healthcare system visit within two months of receiving the stroke risk message.
Interventions
Investigators will develop a standard informational stroke risk message that will not undergo iterative review. This will inform the patient that based on information in the healthcare system, the patient is at higher risk of stroke than many others receiving care in the patient's healthcare system; it will describe options for working with their health care team to reduce the risk of stroke; and encourage the patient to call the health navigator to discuss these options and make a decision about next steps to take to reduce the patient's risk of stroke.
Investigators anticipate that the baseline incentive stroke risk message will inform the patient that they are at higher risk of stroke than many others receiving care in the patient's healthcare system, and will provide information about obtaining an incentive if the patient calls to make contact with a health navigator who will help them plan a next step to reduce their stroke risk. The investigators also anticipate including information that all patients who call will also be entered in a random drawing to receive an additional incentive, with up to six patients receiving this incentive.
Investigators anticipate that the baseline salience stroke risk message will inform the patient that they are at higher risk of stroke than many other patients receiving care in the patient's healthcare system, and will specifically focus on the patient's own risk factors (rather than all stroke risk factors). The salience message will also include visual depictions of stroke patients that are gender and ethnically matched to each subject. This is intended to prompt action by emphasizing that stroke is a real possibility for patients like me.
Combined message of incentive plus salience.
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* • High risk stroke patients 18 years of age or older, as determined by calculation of a Framingham Stroke Risk Score * At least one primary care visit 12 months prior to study initiation with the Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center (VHA) or Sidney & Lois Eskenazi (EHS) Health System primary care clinics
Exclusion criteria
* • Patients with at least one primary care provider visit in the prior 12 months in both the VA and EHS systems
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Proportion of patients responding to mailings in each of four intervention groups | Eight months with 132 mailings per intervention group per month | The primary outcome is the proportion responding to the mailings in each of the four intervention groups. Investigators will calculate the denominator as the number of patients that were sent a mailing (mailing was not returned as undeliverable and patient did not opt out) and the numerator as the number of these mailings that generate a telephone call response. Investigators will track whether the response occurs after the first, second, or third mailing to estimate the utility of subsequent mailings. |
Countries
United States