grant

Michigan Emergency Department Improvement Collaborative AltERnaTives to admission for Pulmonary Embolism (MEDIC ALERT PE) Study

Organization UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN AT ANN ARBORLocation ANN ARBOR, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Jan 2023Deadline 31 Dec 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025Accident and Emergency departmentActive Follow-upAcuteAddressAdherenceAdmissionAdmission activityAdoptionAdverse ExperienceAdverse eventAmbulatory CareAmericanAnticoagulant AgentsAnticoagulant DrugsAnticoagulantsAssess implementationBehavioral SciencesBleedingBlind SpotsCaringClinicalConflictConflict (Psychology)Data CollectionDecision MakingDevelopmentDiagnosisDischarge from Health Care FacilityDisparitiesDisparityDrugsED patientER patientEffectivenessElectronicsElementsEmergency DepartmentEmergency Department patientEmergency MedicineEmergency Room patientEmergency roomEnsureEnvironmentEthnic OriginEthnicityEvaluationEvidence based practice guidelinesGuidelinesHealth CareHealth Care CostsHealth CostsHealth ResourcesHealth systemHemorrhageHomeHospital AdmissionHospital acquired complicationsHospital complicationsHospitalizationHospitalsHybridsImplementation assessmentInfrastructureInsurance CoverageInsurance StatusInterventionInterviewLeadLifeLinkLiteratureMaintenanceMapsMeasuresMedicationMethodologyMichiganMorbidityMorbidity - disease rateOralOut-patientsOutcomeOutpatient CareOutpatientsPathway interactionsPatient DischargePatient PreferencesPatientsPb elementPharmaceutical PreparationsPositionPositioning AttributeProcessPublishingPulmonary EmbolismRE-AIMRaceRacesRandomizedReach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and MaintenanceRecommendationResearchResearch ResourcesResourcesRetinal blind spotRiskRuralSafetySiteSpecific qualifier valueSpecifiedTestingTheory of ChangeUnited Statesactive followupbehavior changebehavioral economicsblood lossblood thinnercare deliverycare resource usecare resource utilizationclinical decision-makingclinical practicedesigndesigningdevelopmentaldrug/agenteffectiveness studyelectronicelectronic deviceevaluate implementationevaluation of implementationevidence baseevidence based guidelinesevidence based recommendationsexperiencefollow upfollow-upfollowed upfollowuphealth care resource usehealth care resource utilizationheavy metal Pbheavy metal leadheuristicshomeshospital related complicationshospital-associated complicationsimplementation determinantsimplementation effortsimplementation evaluationimplementation factorsimplementation frameworkimplementation interventionimplementation outcomesimplementation protocolimplementation research frameworkimplementation scienceimplementation science frameworkimplementation strategyimplementation trialimprovedimproved outcomeinterestmortalitymulti-component interventionmulti-faceted interventionmulti-modal interventionmulticomponent interventionmultifaceted interventionmultimodal interventionnosocomial complicationsoutpatient treatmentpathwaypatient centeredpatient orientedpatient safetypoint of careprimary outcomeprogram disseminationprogramsproject disseminationracialracial backgroundracial originrandomisationrandomizationrandomly assignedreach, efficacy, adoption, implementation, and maintenancesafety outcomessexstrategies for implementationsuburbsuburbansuburbiasuccesssupplemental oxygentheoriesthrombopoiesis inhibitoruser centered design
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Full Description

PROJECT SUMMARY
Of the 250,000 annual patients in the United States with acute pulmonary embolism (PE), the majority are at

low risk for morbidity and mortality. In fact, evidence-based guidelines suggest that up to 50% of patients with

an acute PE are at sufficiently low risk for complications that they can be safely managed without hospital

admission. Yet fewer than 5% of patients nation-wide are currently discharged for outpatient management.

Reliable access to anticoagulant medications and outpatient follow-up are commonly cited barriers to

outpatient management. However, prevailing heuristics used by Emergency Medicine clinicians to enable rapid

decision-making also firmly link acute PE with hospital admission, and likely makes behavior change for these

busy clinicians more challenging. Multiple prior efforts to reduce hospital admission for low-risk patients with

acute PE have been limited by single-center designs, inclusion of homogenous and highly-resourced health

systems, or have lacked a robust implementation plan underpinning to their design and evaluation. Using the

diverse, state-wide Michigan Emergency Department Improvement Collaborative (MEDIC), we will refine,

tailor, and evaluate a multi-component intervention suitable for broad dissemination to increase the use of

outpatient management of low-risk acute PE for patients presenting to the emergency department. Following

an implementation mapping approach built upon published literature and our preliminary findings, our

intervention will address key barriers identified by a diverse group of stakeholders by combining traditional

implementation science and behavioral economics strategies. Importantly, electronic alerts will be informed by

user-centered design approaches to fit within the clinician workflow and decision-making process and “right

sized” to appear only for applicable patients. Evaluation will include both quantitative and qualitative elements

from the RE-AIM implementation evaluation framework. This multi-component intervention will facilitate a

patient-centered approach to clinical decision-making that improves value by reducing unnecessary

hospitalization for patients with low-risk PE. Furthermore, by tailoring and evaluating this intervention within a

diverse set of hospitals, our multi-component intervention will be well positioned for dissemination nation-wide.

Finally, our use of multi-site implementation mapping will provide a blueprint for other multi-site collaboratives

interested in improving outcomes for a broad array of clinical conditions through rigorous quality improvement

and implementation initiatives.

Grant Number: 5R01HL163438-03
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Geoffrey Barnes

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