This pilot project aims to reduce the prescribing of high-risk medications, such as antipsychotics and benzodiazepines, to hospitalized older adults. To accomplish this, this project consists of two phases. The purpose is to determine whether a novel simulation-based training program reduces prescribing of suboptimal medications for older adults. A 2-arm pilot randomized controlled trial will be conducted to test a simulation-based, principle-driven intervention targeting high-risk prescribing practices versus control.
The overarching goal is to determine whether a newly-designed simulation-based training program for providers based on underlying principles of System 1 and System 2 thinking reduces prescribing of high-risk medications for hospitalized older adults versus control, with the ultimate goal of improving patient safety. Subsequent prescribing for patients cared for by other providers and other adoption and implementation outcomes will be measured to explore the extent to which the intervention could be used at scale. 36 interns practicing on the general medicine inpatient service at Brigham and Women's Hospital will be assigned to the "twilight" team. Interns who consent will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to one of 2 arms: (a) Arm 1: simulation training and (b) Arm 2: control (online educational training). Patients who will be included in the analysis will include adults ≥65 years old who are admitted to the BWH/BWFH general medicine service under the care of one of the consenting interns (specifically, with the intern listed as the "Responding Clinician")
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
47
The simulation will consist of a one-time, short immersive simulation session at the STRATUS Center for Medical Education at BWH. The session will be conducted for up to one intern at the same time, in accordance with social distancing practices at BWH. This simulation session will consist of one short, hands-on scenario of simulated patient experiences with expert facilitators in the simulated hospital rooms to help providers identify when they are in the hot state and their reactions, and work on improving communication skills, differential diagnoses, and alternative therapeutic options. These scenarios are intended to simulate both in-person and virtual interactions that are common in the inpatient setting. During these trainings, we will use behavioral principles like time pressure and increasing cognitive load to simulate a "hot state" environment. After the scenarios, the facilitator will perform a debriefing session for the interns.
Providers assigned to the control arm will receive online educational training about other poorly-prescribed medications, including albumin, transfusion, and blood product repletion guidelines. This information will be in the form of electronically-delivered links to information already housed and available at BWH, including reviewing BWH guidelines and literature about transfusion reactions. The interns will be asked to answer several clinical questions about optimal prescribing. Albumin and related products are also high-risk medications often overprescribed on twilight shifts.
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
High-risk Medication Doses
This will include the number of pills or injection order of high-risk medications (i.e., anti-psychotics, benzodiazepines, and sedative hypnotic "Z-drugs") administered to eligible patients (i.e., those 65 or older not previously on one of these medications)
Time frame: Within 2-week service block of participating provider
Percentage of Patients Discharged With Inappropriate Medications
Percentage of patients discharged with inappropriate medications, measured through electronic health record data
Time frame: 2 week follow-up period
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