TY - JOUR
T1 - Identifying Recommendations for Stopping or Scaling Back Unnecessary Routine Services in Primary Care
AU - Kerr, Eve A.
AU - Klamerus, Mandi L.
AU - Markovitz, Adam A.
AU - Sussman, Jeremy B.
AU - Bernstein, Steven J.
AU - Caverly, Tanner J.
AU - Chou, Roger
AU - Min, Lillian
AU - Saini, Sameer D.
AU - Lohman, Shannon E.
AU - Skurla, Sarah E.
AU - Goodrich, David E.
AU - Froehlich, Whit
AU - Hofer, Timothy P.
N1 - Funding Information:
receiving grants from the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Service Research & Development/ Center for Clinical Management Research (HSR&D) during the conduct of the study and personal fees from Bind Insurance outside the submitted work. Dr Sussman reported receiving grants from Department of Veterans Affairs during the conduct of the study. Dr Bernstein reported receiving personal fees from Blue Care Network, Together Health Network, and the Michigan Hospital Association outside the submitted work. Dr Caverly reported receiving grants from the Department of Veterans Affairs during the conduct of the study. Dr Chou reported receiving grants from the Department of Veterans Affairs during the conduct of the study. Dr Min reported receiving grants from the Department of Veterans Affairs during the conduct of the study. Dr Saini reported receiving grants from the Department of Veterans Affairs HSR&D outside the submitted work. Dr Hofer reported receiving grants from the VA HSR&D during the conduct of the study. No other disclosures were reported.
Funding Information:
The current research project, funded by the Department of Veterans Affairs, will identify and validate clinical indications and measures for de-intensification and will develop multi-component strategies to disseminate and implement de-intensification measures.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/11
Y1 - 2020/11
N2 - Importance: Much of health care involves established, routine use of medical services for chronic conditions or prevention. Stopping these services when the evidence changes or if the benefits no longer outweigh the risks is essential. Yet, most guidelines focus on escalating care and provide few explicit recommendations to stop or scale back (ie, deintensify) treatment and testing. Objective: To develop a systematic, transparent, and reproducible approach for identifying, specifying, and validating deintensification recommendations associated with routine adult primary care. Design, Setting, and Participants: A focused review of existing guidelines and recommendations was completed to identify and prioritize potential deintensification indications. Then, 2 modified virtual Delphi expert panels examined the synthesized evidence, suggested ways that the candidate recommendations could be improved, and assessed the validity of the recommendations using the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method. Twenty-five physicians from Veterans Affairs and US academic institutions with knowledge in relevant clinical areas (eg, geriatrics, primary care, women's health, cardiology, and endocrinology) served as panel members. Main Outcomes and Measures: Validity of the recommendations, defined as high-quality evidence that deintensification is likely to improve patient outcomes, evidence that intense testing and/or treatment could cause harm in some patients, absence of evidence on the benefit of continued or repeated intense treatment or testing, and evidence that deintensification is consistent with high-quality care. Results: A total of 409 individual recommendations were identified representing 178 unique opportunities to stop or scale back routine services (eg, stopping population-based screening for vitamin D deficiency and decreasing concurrent use of opioids and benzodiazepines). Thirty-seven recommendations were prioritized and forwarded to the expert panels. Panelists reviewed the evidence and suggested modifications, resulting in 44 recommendations being rated. Overall, 37 recommendations (84%) were considered to be valid, as assessed by the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method. Conclusions and Relevance: In this study, a total of 178 unique opportunities to deintensify routine primary care services were identified, and 37 of these were validated as high-priority deintensification recommendations. To date, this is the first study to develop a model for identifying, specifying, and validating deintensification recommendations that can be implemented and tracked in clinical practice..
AB - Importance: Much of health care involves established, routine use of medical services for chronic conditions or prevention. Stopping these services when the evidence changes or if the benefits no longer outweigh the risks is essential. Yet, most guidelines focus on escalating care and provide few explicit recommendations to stop or scale back (ie, deintensify) treatment and testing. Objective: To develop a systematic, transparent, and reproducible approach for identifying, specifying, and validating deintensification recommendations associated with routine adult primary care. Design, Setting, and Participants: A focused review of existing guidelines and recommendations was completed to identify and prioritize potential deintensification indications. Then, 2 modified virtual Delphi expert panels examined the synthesized evidence, suggested ways that the candidate recommendations could be improved, and assessed the validity of the recommendations using the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method. Twenty-five physicians from Veterans Affairs and US academic institutions with knowledge in relevant clinical areas (eg, geriatrics, primary care, women's health, cardiology, and endocrinology) served as panel members. Main Outcomes and Measures: Validity of the recommendations, defined as high-quality evidence that deintensification is likely to improve patient outcomes, evidence that intense testing and/or treatment could cause harm in some patients, absence of evidence on the benefit of continued or repeated intense treatment or testing, and evidence that deintensification is consistent with high-quality care. Results: A total of 409 individual recommendations were identified representing 178 unique opportunities to stop or scale back routine services (eg, stopping population-based screening for vitamin D deficiency and decreasing concurrent use of opioids and benzodiazepines). Thirty-seven recommendations were prioritized and forwarded to the expert panels. Panelists reviewed the evidence and suggested modifications, resulting in 44 recommendations being rated. Overall, 37 recommendations (84%) were considered to be valid, as assessed by the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method. Conclusions and Relevance: In this study, a total of 178 unique opportunities to deintensify routine primary care services were identified, and 37 of these were validated as high-priority deintensification recommendations. To date, this is the first study to develop a model for identifying, specifying, and validating deintensification recommendations that can be implemented and tracked in clinical practice..
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U2 - 10.1001/jamainternmed.2020.4001
DO - 10.1001/jamainternmed.2020.4001
M3 - Article
C2 - 32926088
AN - SCOPUS:85091278785
SN - 2168-6106
VL - 180
SP - 1500
EP - 1508
JO - JAMA internal medicine
JF - JAMA internal medicine
IS - 11
ER -