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Information about ongoing health services research and public health projects
| Shared decision making for the promotion of patient-centered imaging in the emergency department: suspected kidney stones | |
|---|---|
| Investigator (PI): | Schoenfeld, Elizabeth Mae |
| Performing Organization (PO): |
(Current): Baystate Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine / (413) 794-5375 |
| Supporting Agency (SA): | Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) |
| Initial Year: | 2018 |
| Final Year: | 2023 |
| Record Source/Award ID: | RePorter/K08HS025701 |
| Funding: | 2018 Award Amount: $146,722 |
| Award Type: | Grant |
| Abstract: | Candidate: Dr. Elizabeth Schoenfeld is an emergency medicine physician at the University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS)--Baystate. She completed a fellowship in emergency ultrasound and a master's in clinical and translational science, and her goal is to become an independent investigator with expertise in shared decision making (SDM), decision aid development, and clinical trials of SDM in the emergency department (ED), with a focus on the diagnosis and management of acute renal colic (kidney stones) in ED patients. Research project: Kidney stones affect 1 in 11 Americans, cause debilitating pain, and result in over a million ED visits each year. Total charges for the care for kidney stones exceed $10 billion annually. The large majority of patients seen in an ED for a possible kidney stone undergo a computed tomography (CT) scan, despite strong evidence that an ultrasound is safe, effective, less expensive, and does not expose patients to radiation. Because there are potential risks and benefits to both CT and ultrasound, the decision regarding which to use is an appropriate one for shared decision making, the collaborative process in which patients and physicians make a healthcare decision together, taking into account the best available evidence and the patient's values and preferences. Decision aids are tools designed by clinicians, patients, and other stakeholders to facilitate a conversation aimed to enable shared decision making. Dr. Schoenfeld proposes to (aim 1) use established stakeholder engagement methods, including interviews and focus groups, to develop, design, and revise a decision aid to use in the setting of suspected renal colic; and (aim 2) pilot this decision aid via a randomized controlled trial of 100 ED patients presenting with signs and symptoms of suspected renal colic. The overall goals of this project are to educate and empower patients to be involved in medical decisions that involve radiation exposure, and to safely decrease the radiation burden to this population. Both aims will be carried out at Baystate Medical Center, Springfield, Massachusetts, which serves a population with a large proportion of minority and low-income patients (AHRQ priority populations). The data from the pilot will support the development of a larger randomized controlled trial aimed at increasing SDM in the ED and safely decreasing CT use. Environment and mentors: Under the experienced mentorship of Drs. Lindenauer, Mazor, Hess, and Pekow, Dr. Schoenfeld will carry out the proposed research plan in concert with a structured curriculum focusing on qualitative methods, clinical trials, and patient-oriented research methods. Dr. Schoenfeld's proposal brings together the resources of the Baystate Medical Center emergency department (which sees 115,000 patients/year), the Institute for Healthcare Delivery and Population Science (UMMS-Baystate), the University of Massachusetts Medical School Center for Clinical and Translational Science, and the Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute. In alignment with AHRQ's mission, Dr. Schoenfeld's overall research goals are to make ED care safer, more patient-centered, and more cost-effective. |
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| Country: | United States |
| State: | Massachusetts |
| Zip Code: | 01199 |
| UI: | 20184042 |
| Project Status: | Ongoing |