• J Gen Intern Med · Jan 2023

    Pragmatic Clinical Trial

    Reaching Ambulatory Older Adults with Educational Tools: Comparative Efficacy and Cost of Varied Outreach Modalities in Primary Care.

    • N LaVine, K Emmert, J Itty, D Martins-Welch, M Carney, A Block, L Burgess, A E Volandes, S N Zupanc, S Jacome, V Gromova, A D Davis, P Schwartz, A Alvarez-Suarez, and Edith Burns.
    • Department of Medicine, Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra Northwell, Hempstead, NY, USA.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2023 Jan 1; 38 (1): 125130125-130.

    BackgroundProviding patients with access to health information that can be obtained outside of an office visit is an important part of education, yet little is known about the effectiveness of outreach modalities to connect older adults to online educational tools. The objective was to identify the effectiveness and cost of outreach modalities providing online information about advance care planning (ACP) for older adults.MethodsSix different outreach modalities were utilized to connect patients to online educational tools (ACP video decision aids). Participants were 13,582 patients aged 65 and older of 185 primary care providers with appointments over a 30-month period within a large health system in the greater New York City area. Main outcome measures were number of online video views and costs per outreach for each modality.Key ResultsThere were 1150 video views for 21,407 remote outreach events. Text messages, sent to the largest volume of patients (8869), had the highest outcome rate (9.6%) and were the most economical ($0.09). Characterization of phone calls demonstrated 21.7% engagement in the topic of ACP but resulted in minimal video views (<1%) and incurred the highest cost per outreach ($2.88). In-office handouts had negligible results (<1%).ConclusionsText was the most cost-effective modality to connect older adults to an online educational tool in this pragmatic trial, though overall efficacy of all modalities was low.© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine.

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