The aim of this study is to pilot test a web-based, patient-centered educational program that encourages the patient to have an informed discussion about pain medication options with their emergency department (ED) provider.
This multi-site, randomized trial will evaluate an m-health program designed to aid the patient in making an informed decision about their pain treatment. Patients reporting to the ED with an injury-related chief complaint who agree to participate are randomized to receive the intervention program, My Healthy Choices, or an attention-matched control. My Healthy Choices pairs tailored education with a patient decision aid to describe what opioid and non-opioid pain medications are, assess the patient's risk factors for opioid-related adverse effects, and produce a tailored report that patients are encouraged to share with their doctor. Data are collected through surveys at three time points during the ED encounter (baseline, immediately after the intervention, and just before discharge), and at a 6-week follow-up survey. The primary outcomes are whether the patient prefers an opioid pain reliever (OPR) and whether the patient takes an OPR. The investigators hope this program will facilitate patient-provider communication, as well as reduce the number of prescriptions written for OPRs and thus the number of patients exposed to prescription opioids and the associated risks of addiction and overdose.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
123
My Healthy Choices explains what opioid pain medications are, assesses and explains the patient's risk factors related to taking opioids, assesses patient preferences about pain medications, and produces a tailored patient report based on the answers. The patient is encouraged to show the report to the treating ED clinician so they can discuss medication options for treating the patient's pain. Following discharge from the ED, intervention group participants discharged with a prescription pain reliever receive messages about safe medication use, storage, and disposal and access to an educational web portal that contains more information on prescription pain medications and safety.
The WellSource health risk assessment content focuses on general health promotion, and the participant's overall health and wellness. A summary report based on the participants' answers is sent to their email address.
Johns Hopkins Hospital Emergency Department
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
West Virginia University Emergency Department
Morgantown, West Virginia, United States
Change in Self-Reported Preference for Opioid Pain Reliever
Assessed via questionnaire on a scale of 0-10.
Time frame: Baseline and Immediate Post-test
Change in Knowledge about Prescription Pain Medication Side Effects and Safe Practices for Taking, Storing and Disposing Prescription Pain Medications
Assessed with a 25-item questionnaire. Knowledge items will be scored correct or incorrect and summed to generate a total knowledge score.
Time frame: Baseline and 6 weeks
Self-Reported Prescription Drug Storage and Disposal Behaviors
Assessed via 5 items on a questionnaire. Behaviors will be scored correct or incorrect and tabulated across study groups.
Time frame: 6 weeks
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