Breaking Implicit Bias Habits: An Individuation Pilot Study In Rheumatology

Sponsor
Brigham and Women's Hospital (Other)
Overall Status
Enrolling by invitation
CT.gov ID
NCT05116163
Collaborator
National Institute on Aging (NIA) (NIH), Virginia Commonwealth University (Other), Massachusetts General Hospital (Other)
220
2
2
11.4
110
9.6

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

The first aim of this study is to test the efficacy of a real-time provider-based individuation intervention to improve the receipt of high-quality rheumatic disease care among Black/African American and lower socioeconomic status (SES) individuals. The second aim is to determine the effect of the individuation intervention on provider-patient communication, adherence, provider trust and care satisfaction.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Individuation Intervention plus implicit bias educational modules
  • Other: Implicit bias educational modules
N/A

Detailed Description

The goal of this pilot is to test the efficacy of an individuation-based intervention among rheumatologists and their patients at two large, multisite academic-based hospital practices to improve racial and SES equity in receipt of high quality care. The primary aim is not to reduce provider bias, but rather to reduce the reliance on implicit bias in care decisions for Black and lower SES patients to lessen the impact of structural racism and inequality on care.

The investigators plan to conduct a cluster-randomized controlled trial. The clusters are 20 rheumatologists at multisite BWH and MGH-affiliated clinics. Rheumatologists will be stratified by hospital and by gender and randomly assigned to one of two groups. Ten rheumatologists will be assigned to the intervention arm and ten to the control. Assessments will be conducted for 8-10 patients per rheumatologist (max 100 patients total in each arm, 200 total). Randomization will be stratified by hospital (MGH or BWH) and by provider gender (male or female). Inclusion and exclusion criteria for providers and patients are listed under Eligibility Criteria.

Providers who consent will be stratified by gender and site and randomized to the intervention or control arm. All providers in both arms will be asked to complete demographic surveys and four Implicit Association Tests (IATs). Two of the tests assess biases related to race and two parallel tests assess biases related to socioeconomic status. After providers take the IATs and complete the baseline demographics form, both arms will be given the link to freely available brief unconscious bias training module. The module that will be used has been approved by the MA Medical Society and is eligible for CME, which can be applied towards the unconscious bias training CMEs required for MA medical license renewal as of June 1, 2022. Upon completion of the unconscious bias module, providers in the intervention arm will meet with study team members to discuss their "individuation" countermeasure intervention and to view the brief presentation with a study team member about individuation.

At least one month after providers take the IATs, the study team will begin the process of recording 8-10 provider-patient interactions within each providers' practice. This will occur both at MGH and BWH rheumatology clinic sites. Providers will also be immediately informed before a patient encounter that will be recorded and will have the opportunity to decline. To record, a digital voice recorder will be used (placed in the room by a research team member with both patient and provider aware, and collected immediately following the encounter), and all data will be transferred to the project-specific MGB secure drive at the end of each day and then deleted from the device. These files will be transcribed verbatim using an MGB-approved vendor and all identifiable information will be removed. After 4 months, which is the estimate for recruitment time, providers will be asked to repeat the IATs.

Patients who consent to participate will be asked to have one clinical encounter with their provider recorded (preferably the next appointment) and then to complete a set of baseline surveys following that encounter including demographics, social determinants of health, everyday discrimination experiences, satisfaction with care, patient trust in the medical profession, patient perception of care centeredness and medication adherence. The investigators will also collect data from the patients' charts. These data include: demographics, social determinants of health, comorbidities/diagnoses, quality metrics related to their rheumatic disease, lab results, preventive care use (including immunizations), healthcare utilization (including ED visits, hospitalizations, outpatient visits and appointment no shows), medication use (including use of contraception as a quality metric), and medication refill data over the 6 months following the date of the recorded encounter. The investigators will review the note from the date of the encounter and determine whether the individuation statement was documented in the intervention group.

For patients with lupus or RA seen at least once by participating providers in both the intervention and control arm, The study team will examine the charts of patients during the 6 months following provider enrollment, beginning 1 month after the date the provider takes the IATs. The study teams estimates that this will include approximately 1000 patients. The study team plan to collect demographics, social determinants of health, comorbidities/diagnoses, quality metrics related to their rheumatic disease, lab results, preventive care use (including immunizations), healthcare utilization (including ED visits, hospitalizations, outpatient visits and appointment no shows), medication use (including use of contraception as a quality metric), and medication refill data over the 6 months following the date of the recorded encounter. The investigators will also see if any of the individuation statements (smart phrases) were used for patients not specifically enrolled in the intervention.

At the end of the study, all data will be deidentified and analyzed in aggregate. Results in aggregate will be presented in an end-of-study Grand Rounds to both the BWH and MGH rheumatology divisions (there is a combined grand rounds). The team will also provide a list of online resources about implicit bias. For patients, after the completion of the 3-month adherence assessment, the study team will provide them with a score report indicating what their scores on each of the respective surveys mean.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
220 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description:
The investigators plan to enroll 20 rheumatologists and a maximum of 200 patients randomized into two different control arms. The providers will observe the outcomes in each separate arm as well as evaluate the results of both arms to each other.The investigators plan to enroll 20 rheumatologists and a maximum of 200 patients randomized into two different control arms. The providers will observe the outcomes in each separate arm as well as evaluate the results of both arms to each other.
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose:
Health Services Research
Official Title:
Breaking Implicit Bias Habits: An Individuation Pilot to Promote Equity in Rheumatic Disease Care
Actual Study Start Date :
Jun 17, 2022
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
May 31, 2023
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
May 31, 2023

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Arm 1: Individuation Intervention plus implicit bias education

10 rheumatologists who will have 10 patient interactions each (100 patients total) recorded Rheumatologists will watch implicit bias training modules and then will be instructed to incorporate an individuation strategy into each of their clinical encounters.

Behavioral: Individuation Intervention plus implicit bias educational modules
Providers in the intervention are will be instructed to watch several implicit bias educational modules and then they will meet with study team members to discuss their "individuation" countermeasure intervention. Providers will be given a choice of several individuation-related questions to better understand the unique characteristics of each patient. Once the provider decides on his/her choice phrases, the research team will assist with the development of a smart phrase (also called "dot phrase") to allow them to incorporate this into a note. Once a week, providers in the intervention arm will receive an email reminding them to incorporate this question and the documentation into their encounters.

Other: Implicit bias educational modules
Providers in the comparator arm will be given the same implicit bias educational modules to watch.

Active Comparator: Arm 2: Implicit bias education only

10 rheumatologists randomized and stratified by hospital and gender

Other: Implicit bias educational modules
Providers in the comparator arm will be given the same implicit bias educational modules to watch.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Percent of patients receiving high quality care [30 days]

    Documented receipt of high-quality care at the time of the appointment or within 30 days of the appointment. The quality metrics for Lupus and RA include but are not limited to: Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) initiation and Folic acid if receiving methotrexate, respectively. These items will be added together to form a score and the number of items completed out of the total will be the primary outcome measure compared across groups. This data will be measured for all patients with SLE and RA seen by the provider during the 6-month study period in addition to separate subgroup analysis focused on the patients who had their appointments audio recorded.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Implicit Association Test (IAT) scores [Baseline compared to 6 months after the start of the intervention.]

    Change in provider IAT scores pre and post intervention.

  2. Perception of Patient Centeredness [Baseline (one time evaluation)]

    Differences in perception of patient centeredness comparing the intervention to non-intervention group. Higher scores indicate less patient-centered experiences. 4-point Likert scale, score range from 14-56.

  3. Patient Satisfaction [Baseline (one time evaluation)]

    Differences in patient satisfaction score, comparing the intervention to non-intervention group. Score range from 20-70.

  4. Everyday Discrimination Scale [Baseline (one time evaluation)]

    Change in daily discrimination encountered from baseline to 6 months using the Everyday Discrimination Scale, comparing the intervention to non-intervention group. Score range is 0-40. Higher scores indicate a worse outcome (higher scores indicate a greater amount of discrimination encountered).

  5. Adherence [Baseline compared to 3 months after the start of the intervention.]

    Change in adherence score (for lupus medications), comparing the intervention to non-intervention group. Score range is 0-100 with zero being the lowest adherence, and 100 being the best.

  6. Number of emergency department visits and hospitalizations [6 months following the encounter of interest]

    The investigators will compare number of ED visits and hospitalizations

  7. Provider communication [Baseline (one time evaluation)]

    Provider communication will be measured using the recorded transcripts and compared between arms. Measured only for patients enrolled in the study who had their appointment audio recorded.

  8. Patient Trust [Baseline (one time evaluation)]

    Change in patient trust score, comparing the intervention to non-intervention group. Responses are summed (range 5-25) with higher scores indicating more trust.

  9. Number of outpatient visits [6 months following the encounter of interest]

    The investigators will compare the number of outpatient visits completed and outpatient visit no shows between the two arms.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years and Older
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Providers: Providers will be male or female adult rheumatologists with >=1 clinical sessions/week at BWH or MGH rheumatology clinics. The providers will aim to include a range of provider ages and years in practice.

  • Patients: The study team will include male and female patients of the participating providers who are able to provide consent, English-speaking, >=18 years old, Black or African American or insured by Medicaid/Mass Health (as a proxy for low socioeconomic status), have a diagnosis of SLE or RA (or referred to rheumatology because of high suspicion for these conditions), and have been seen <2 times in the past year by the provider.

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Providers: Drs. Feldman and Schoenfeld (and their respective patients) will be excluded from this study.

  • Patients: The providers will exclude patients who incarcerated or unable to consent. The providers will exclude any patient from our searches who has opted out of research.

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts United States 02114
2 Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston Massachusetts United States 02115

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Brigham and Women's Hospital
  • National Institute on Aging (NIA)
  • Virginia Commonwealth University
  • Massachusetts General Hospital

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Candace H Feldman, MD, ScD, Brigham and Women's Hospital

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Candace Hillary Feldman, MD, Assistant Professor, Brigham and Women's Hospital
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT05116163
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 2021P002882
  • 5P30AG064199
First Posted:
Nov 10, 2021
Last Update Posted:
Jul 6, 2022
Last Verified:
Jul 1, 2022
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Candace Hillary Feldman, MD, Assistant Professor, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jul 6, 2022