Evaluation of a community health promotion resource for primary care practices.

BACKGROUND Primary care physicians' ability to provide effective health behavior change advice might be leveraged by linking to available community resources. This study evaluates tools to facilitate such a link. DESIGN A mixed methods longitudinal pre-post-test study was conducted in 2004. SETTING/ PARTICIPANTS Seven primary care practices in northeast Ohio and two longitudinal cohorts of patients (n=784). INTERVENTION The practice-tailored intervention included two main components: (1) a web-based health behavior change resource including a database of community programs and patient education materials, and (2) a health behavior prescription pad. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Rates of discussion of diet, exercise, weight management, and smoking cessation; and patient change in motivation to modify behaviors at 8 weeks post-visit. Qualitative field notes about practice routines, culture, and implementation efforts were analyzed to enhance understanding of the practice change process. RESULTS The post-intervention cohort reported higher rates of discussion of diet (25.7% vs 20.2%), exercise (27.8% vs 16.9%), and weight management (23.2% vs 16.3%), and greater referral to patient education materials (24.2% vs 21.6%) and community programs for health behavior change (16.0% vs 13.6%) (p<0.05). No difference in change in patient motivation to modify behavior was observed between the pre- and post-intervention cohorts. Evaluation of the qualitative field notes suggests that for six of seven practices, the intervention was not appreciably implemented. CONCLUSIONS The intervention tools show promise for increasing clinician discussion of health behaviors, information referral, and referral to community resources. Additional work to increase practice adoption of the tools is required to understand their potential to affect patient motivation to change behavior.

[1]  Shu-Hong Zhu,et al.  Evidence of real-world effectiveness of a telephone quitline for smokers. , 2002, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  R. McDaniel,et al.  Complexity science and health care management , 2001 .

[3]  C. T. Orleans,et al.  Evaluating primary care behavioral counseling interventions: an evidence-based approach. , 2002, American journal of preventive medicine.

[4]  P P Horan,et al.  Computer-Assisted Self-Control of Diabetes by Adolescents , 1990, The Diabetes educator.

[5]  Kurt C Stange,et al.  Sustainability of a practice-individualized preventive service delivery intervention. , 2003, American journal of preventive medicine.

[6]  Allan Best,et al.  Health promotion dissemination and systems thinking: towards an integrative model. , 2003, American journal of health behavior.

[7]  B. Swinburn,et al.  The green prescription study: a randomized controlled trial of written exercise advice provided by general practitioners. , 1998, American journal of public health.

[8]  M. Cabana,et al.  Pediatrician self-efficacy for counseling parents of asthmatic children to quit smoking. , 2004, Pediatrics.

[9]  J. Schwartzberg,et al.  Effect of training on physician attitudes and practices in home and community care of the elderly. , 1997, Archives of family medicine.

[10]  M. Goldstein,et al.  Addressing multiple behavioral risk factors in primary care. A synthesis of current knowledge and stakeholder dialogue sessions. , 2004, American journal of preventive medicine.

[11]  S. Flocke,et al.  Tools, teamwork, and tenacity: an examination of family practice office system influences on preventive service delivery. , 2003, Preventive medicine.

[12]  J. Tobin,et al.  Cancer early-detection services in community health centers for the underserved. A randomized controlled trial. , 1998, Archives of family medicine.

[13]  Scott Wright,et al.  Health care practitioners' motivation for tobacco-dependence counseling. , 2003, Health education research.

[14]  Rachael McKendry,et al.  Defusing the Confusion: Concepts and Measures of Continuity of Healthcare , 2002 .

[15]  H. Farreny,et al.  Telematic expert system Diabeto: New Tool for Diet Self-Monitoring for Diabetic Patients , 1992, Diabetes Care.

[16]  D. Gustafson,et al.  An Evidence-Based Approach to Interactive Health Communication: A Challenge to Medicine in the Information Age , 1998 .

[17]  K. Berra The Effect of Lifestyle Interventions on Quality of Life and Patient Satisfaction With Health and Health Care , 2003, The Journal of cardiovascular nursing.

[18]  D. Lieberman,et al.  Educational video game for juvenile diabetes: results of a controlled trial. , 1997, Medical informatics = Medecine et informatique.

[19]  M. Mettler,et al.  Information Therapy: Health Education One Person at a Time , 2003, Health promotion practice.

[20]  P A Carney,et al.  Tools, teamwork, and tenacity: an office system for cancer prevention. , 1992, The Journal of family practice.

[21]  Linda Madsen,et al.  Effectiveness of telephone support in increasing physical activity levels in primary care patients. , 2002, American journal of preventive medicine.

[22]  P. Margolis,et al.  Improving preventive service delivery through office systems. , 2001, Pediatrics.

[23]  Kathleen M. Fairfield,et al.  Colon cancer risk counseling by health-care providers: perceived barriers and response to an internet-based cancer risk appraisal instrument. , 2004, Journal of cancer education : the official journal of the American Association for Cancer Education.

[24]  B. Swinburn,et al.  Green prescriptions: attitudes and perceptions of general practitioners towards prescribing exercise. , 1997, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[25]  K. Glanz,et al.  Health Behavior and Health Education , 1990 .

[26]  W F Velicer,et al.  What Makes a Good Staging Algorithm: Examples from Regular Exercise , 1997, American journal of health promotion : AJHP.

[27]  Ann P Rafferty,et al.  Healthy lifestyle characteristics among adults in the United States, 2000. , 2005, Archives of internal medicine.

[28]  D. Tate,et al.  User attitudes toward a physical activity promotion website. , 2002, Preventive medicine.

[29]  J. Susman,et al.  Primary care physicians' perceptions of diabetes management. A balancing act. , 1999, The Journal of family practice.

[30]  B. Blanksby,et al.  How can and do Australian doctors promote physical activity? , 1997, Preventive medicine.

[31]  M. Raw,et al.  General practitioners' views on and referral to NHS smoking cessation services. , 2005, Public health.

[32]  Victoria Barr,et al.  The expanded Chronic Care Model: an integration of concepts and strategies from population health promotion and the Chronic Care Model. , 2003, Hospital quarterly.

[33]  C. Feifer,et al.  Strategies for increasing adherence to clinical guidelines and improving patient outcomes in small primary care practices. , 2004, Joint Commission journal on quality and safety.

[34]  Kurt C Stange,et al.  One minute for prevention: the power of leveraging to fulfill the promise of health behavior counseling. , 2002, American journal of preventive medicine.

[35]  S. Woolf,et al.  Putting It Together: Finding Success in Behavior Change Through Integration of Services , 2005, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[36]  E S Geller,et al.  Altering shoppers' supermarket purchases to fit nutritional guidelines: an interactive information system. , 1991, Journal of applied behavior analysis.

[37]  Alan L. Rector,et al.  MEDICAL INFORMATICS , 1990, The Lancet.

[38]  R F DeBusk,et al.  Development and evaluation of a computer-based system for dietary management of hyperlipidemia. , 1997, Journal of the American Dietetic Association.

[39]  S. Mcphee,et al.  Office‐based interventions to improve delivery of cancer prevention services by primary care physicians , 1993, Cancer.

[40]  K C Stange,et al.  A clinical trial of tailored office systems for preventive service delivery. The Study to Enhance Prevention by Understanding Practice (STEP-UP). , 2001, American journal of preventive medicine.

[41]  D. Cherry,et al.  National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey: 2001 summary. , 2003, Advance data.

[42]  B H Marcus,et al.  Maintenance of physical activity following an individualized motivationally tailored intervention , 2001, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.

[43]  L. Anderson,et al.  Implementing preventive services: To what extent can we change provider performance in ambulatory care? A review of the screening, immunization, and counseling literature , 1998, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.

[44]  Clarence D Kreiter,et al.  A randomized controlled trial of an information prescription for pediatric patient education on the Internet. , 2004, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[45]  John G. Scott,et al.  Assessing Diversity and Quality in Primary Care Through the Multimethod Assessment Process (MAP) , 2002, Quality management in health care.

[46]  L. Klesges,et al.  Health Promotion Referrals in an Urban Clinic: Removing Financial Barriers Influences Physician but Not Patient Behavior , 2005, American journal of health promotion : AJHP.

[47]  S. Flocke,et al.  Opportunistic preventive services delivery. Are time limitations and patient satisfaction barriers? , 1998, The Journal of family practice.

[48]  Sheana S Bull,et al.  Interactive behavior change technology. A partial solution to the competing demands of primary care. , 2004, American journal of preventive medicine.

[49]  D H Gustafson,et al.  CHESS: a computer-based system for providing information, referrals, decision support and social support to people facing medical and other health-related crises. , 1992, Proceedings. Symposium on Computer Applications in Medical Care.

[50]  Thomas K Houston,et al.  Visit satisfaction and tailored health behavior communications in primary care. , 2004, American journal of preventive medicine.

[51]  Yanovski Sz A practical approach to treatment of the obese patient. , 1993 .

[52]  W. Hersh Medical informatics: improving health care through information. , 2002, JAMA.

[53]  Jean-Christophe Buisson,et al.  Telematic expert system: Diabeto , 1992 .

[54]  John G. Scott,et al.  Opportunistic approaches for delivering preventive care in illness visits. , 2004, Preventive Medicine.

[55]  D. Gemson,et al.  Office system interventions supporting primary care-based health behavior change counseling. , 1999, American journal of preventive medicine.

[56]  M. Cabana,et al.  Why don't physicians follow clinical practice guidelines? A framework for improvement. , 1999, JAMA.

[57]  K C Stange,et al.  Illuminating the 'black box'. A description of 4454 patient visits to 138 family physicians. , 1998, The Journal of family practice.

[58]  C. T. Orleans,et al.  Does the chronic care model serve also as a template for improving prevention? , 2001, The Milbank quarterly.

[59]  K C Stange,et al.  Direct observation of rates of preventive service delivery in community family practice. , 2000, Preventive medicine.

[60]  S. Schroeder What to do with a patient who smokes. , 2005, JAMA.

[61]  S. Flocke,et al.  Patient and visit characteristics associated with opportunistic preventive services delivery. , 1998, The Journal of family practice.

[62]  L. Solberg,et al.  Failure of a continuous quality improvement intervention to increase the delivery of preventive services. A randomized trial. , 2000, Effective clinical practice : ECP.

[63]  M. Stewart,et al.  Professional interface with mutual-aid self-help groups: a review. , 1990, Social science & medicine.

[64]  R. Deyo,et al.  Prompting Primary Providers to Increase Community Exercise Referrals for Older Adults: A Randomized Trial , 2005, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[65]  S. Flocke,et al.  Mutual Learning and the Transformation of Study Intervention Tools , 2005, The Annals of Family Medicine.

[66]  J. Pugh,et al.  Evidence-based guidelines meet the real world: the case of diabetes care. , 2001, Diabetes care.

[67]  D. Stokols,et al.  An Integrative Framework for Community Partnering to Translate Theory into Effective Health Promotion Strategy , 2003, American journal of health promotion : AJHP.

[68]  J E Rodnick,et al.  Promoting cancer prevention activities by primary care physicians. Results of a randomized, controlled trial. , 1991, JAMA.

[69]  C Lister,et al.  An evidence-based approach , 1998, British Dental Journal.

[70]  E. Jané-Llopis,et al.  How can we increase the involvement of primary health care in the treatment of tobacco dependence? A meta-analysis. , 2004, Addiction.

[71]  Christopher N. Sciamanna,et al.  Brief Report: What types of internet guidance do patients want from their physicians? , 2005, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[72]  William Rakowski,et al.  Assessing the transtheoretical model of change constructs for physicians counseling smokers , 2003, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.

[73]  Edward J. Callahan,et al.  Illuminating the 'Black Box' , 1998 .

[74]  J. O'Loughlin,et al.  Smoking cessation counseling practices of general practitioners in Montreal. , 2001, Preventive medicine.

[75]  Robert P. Hawkins,et al.  CHESS: 10 years of research and development in consumer health informatics for broad populations, including the underserved , 2002, Int. J. Medical Informatics.