Testing a Personally Controlled Health Record to Ameliorate Influenza at MIT (Indivo at MIT)
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Purpose
The purpose of this project is to evaluate the effects on influenza related knowledge, attitudes and behaviors of exposure to tailored/targeted health messages and contextualized information about influenza like illness delivered to subjects through a personally controlled health record system. The main study hypothesis is that exposure to more intensive levels of personalized and contextualized information about risk will result in increased knowledge about influenza, greater attributions of immunization safety and efficacy, improved health protecting behaviors including higher levels of appropriate immunization.
| Condition | Intervention |
|---|---|
|
Influenza |
Other: Health messaging Other: Health messages |
| Study Type: | Interventional |
| Study Design: | Allocation: Randomized Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment Masking: Single Blind (Subject) Primary Purpose: Prevention |
| Official Title: | Test of the PING/INDIVO Personal Health Record System at MIT |
- appropriate immunization behavior [ Time Frame: six months ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
- reduced presenteeism for school and work [ Time Frame: six months ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
- appropriate immunization behaviors for close household/family members [ Time Frame: six months ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
- knowledge about influenza and beliefs about influenza risk and transmission [ Time Frame: six months ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
| Estimated Enrollment: | 800 |
| Study Start Date: | October 2007 |
| Study Completion Date: | January 2009 |
| Primary Completion Date: | July 2008 (Final data collection date for primary outcome measure) |
| Arms | Assigned Interventions |
|---|---|
|
Experimental: I
Exposure to both tailored/targeted health messages about influenza and also to reports about contextualized influenza risk
|
Other: Health messaging
Combinations of personalized health messages (tailored/targeted) and contextualized health messages (reports about localized epidemiologic risk) will be delivered to subjects
|
|
Experimental: II
Exposure to tailored/targeted health messages
|
Other: Health messaging
Combinations of personalized health messages (tailored/targeted) and contextualized health messages (reports about localized epidemiologic risk) will be delivered to subjects
|
|
Experimental: III
Exposure to reports about influenza related contextualized risk
|
Other: Health messaging
Combinations of personalized health messages (tailored/targeted) and contextualized health messages (reports about localized epidemiologic risk) will be delivered to subjects
|
|
Active Comparator: IV
Comparison group exposed to community level health promotion messages not generated by the study
|
Other: Health messages
community level health messages unrelated to the study originating exposures
|
Hide Detailed DescriptionDetailed Description:
The goal of our work is to test an information infrastructure that creates a three-way link among individuals, health care providers and public health authorities, testing the efficacy of this system for improving the prevention and control of influenza. Our model comprises a full feedback system in which an electronic personally controlled health record (PCHR) provides a primary data source for population-based surveillance and a vehicle for delivery of health promotion messages, in this case about influenza immunization and control. This system will feed into and draw on data from a statewide real-time influenza surveillance system, and be integrated with hospital/provider data systems, forming the three-way link. The influenza pandemic is a "great global infectious disease threat" {Osterholm, 2005} for which we are ill prepared. With limited vaccine supply for the past two years and probably next year as well, it is critical to: understand who should be vaccinated to ameliorate population-wide transmission; have effective channels for delivering health directives to high risk groups; monitor efficacy. We will deploy and test our three-way link model and PCHR record system in a multisite study and evaluate using a randomized controlled design the effects on immunization rates of tailored messages about influenza immunization delivered to patients through the electronic health record. Our focus is children ages 6 months to ten years of age and their household members (two of four settings), all age groups including children and working adults (two settings), and university students/staff (one setting). The specific aims follow.
Aim 1.To leverage an electronic personally controlled health record as a public health tool, establishing three way communication systems among individuals, health systems, and public health agencies. We will establish a formal mechanism for patients to integrate and share healthcare-based and personally entered information. Individuals can share information from their medical record, and in response to surveys delivered through the system. There will be two way communications between the record and the State Immunization Registry. Particular attention will be paid to information security, compliance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) privacy rule, and personal control. Primary measurements include the structural integrity of the information system, use and usability of the system, and user acceptance. The main hypothesis to be tested is that people are generally willing to share their personally controlled data to promote personal and public health.
Aim 2. To adapt a traditional syndromic surveillance system, initially designed as an early detector of outbreaks, to nimbly identify patients to be targeted for behavior change through personally controlled electronic records. We will develop health messages as cues to action, directed at improving individual compliance with influenza prevention, calibrating our detection models to identify high risk groups, based on demographic and clinical data contained in personal health records. Messages will be targeted at appropriate risk groups and contain information tailored to the individual's characteristics. The primary focus will be to encourage influenza immunization when indicated and conversely, to encourage delay in immunization under conditions of low risk and scarcity. We will change the content, tempo, and targets of the messages based on real time influenza surveillance. The main hypothesis to be tested is that a real-time surveillance system can be used to calibrate health messaging. A second hypothesis is that sentinel individuals can provide data to surveillance systems that adds value to what is already collected.
Aim 3. To measure the impact on immunization rates of tailored health messages, linked to surveillance, and delivered through a personal health record. We will evaluate the impact of directed communications delivered to randomly selected study participants through a personal health record on influenza vaccination rates comparing them to rates among control participants. Secondary outcomes will include message impacts on rates of self-reported illness, knowledge, attitudes and beliefs about influenza and immunization efficacy, use of recommended health protective behaviors. We will investigate the impacts on technology use and immunization rates of a range of individual social demographic characteristics, household characteristics, and computing-related factors that may influence the acceptability of the proposed technology and/or target health behaviors. The main hypothesis to be tested is that individuals exposed to tailored health messages delivered through a PCHR will have higher influenza immunization rates than their unexposed peers. Secondary hypotheses are that compliance will be moderated by computing experience, acceptability/accessibility, individual demographics (e.g., age, sex, race/ethnicity, social class) social and scheduling supports (e.g., work/time schedule flexibility) , family health factors, and logistical factors (transportation, ease of access to immunization sites, convenience, clear scheduling/notification and minimal waiting time for services).
Eligibility| Ages Eligible for Study: | 18 Years and older |
| Genders Eligible for Study: | Both |
| Accepts Healthy Volunteers: | Yes |
Inclusion Criteria:
- Ages 18 and over
- English speaker
- Affiliated with study site
Exclusion Criteria:
- Younger than 18
- No access to computers or the internet
Contacts and Locations| United States, Massachusetts | |
| Children's Hospital Boston | |
| Boston, Massachusetts, United States, 02215 | |
| Principal Investigator: | Elissa R Weitzman | Children's Hospital Boston |
| Principal Investigator: | Kenneth D Mandl | Children's Hospital Boston |
More Information
No publications provided
| Responsible Party: | Elissa R. Weitzman, Children's Hospital Boston |
| ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT00531700 History of Changes |
| Other Study ID Numbers: | 06-07-0347 |
| Study First Received: | September 18, 2007 |
| Last Updated: | April 30, 2009 |
| Health Authority: | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Keywords provided by Children's Hospital Boston:
|
influenza risk behaviors immunization |
knowledge attitudes behaviors personally controlled health record Indivo |
Additional relevant MeSH terms:
|
Influenza, Human Orthomyxoviridae Infections RNA Virus Infections |
Virus Diseases Respiratory Tract Infections Respiratory Tract Diseases |
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on May 19, 2013