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Effectiveness of clinical decision support to enhance delivery of family planning services in primary care settings
Institution:1. Institute for Family Health, 2006 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10035, United States;2. Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Department of Family and Social Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Ave, Bronx, NY 10461, United States;3. Reproductive Health Access Project, PO Box 21191, New York, NY 10025, United States
Abstract:PurposeThere is a need to improve delivery of family planning services, including preconception and contraception services, in primary care. We assessed whether a clinician-facing clinical decision support implemented in a family medicine staffed primary care network improved provision of family planning services for reproductive-aged female patients, and differed in effect for certain patients or clinical settings.MethodsWe conducted a pragmatic study with difference-in-differences design to estimate, at the visit-level, the clinical decision support’s effect on documenting the provision of family planning services 52 weeks prior to and after implementation. We also used logistic regression with a sample subset to evaluate intervention effect on the patient-level.Results27,817 eligible patients made 91,185 visits during the study period. Overall, unadjusted documentation of family planning services increased by 2.7 percentage points (55.7% pre-intervention to 58.4% intervention). In the adjusted analysis, documentation increased by 3.4 percentage points (95% CI: 2.24, 4.63). The intervention effect varied across sites at the visit-level, ranging from a ?1.2 to +6.5 percentage point change. Modification of effect by race, insurance, and site were substantial, but not by age group nor ethnicity. Additionally, patient-level subset analysis showed that those exposed to the intervention had 1.26 times the odds of having family planning services documented after implementation compared to controls (95% CI: 1.17, 1.36).ConclusionsThis clinical decision support modestly improved documentation of family planning services in our primary care network; effect varied across sites.ImplicationsIntegrating a family planning services clinical decision support into the electronic medical record at primary care sites may increase the provision of preconception and/or contraception services for women of reproductive age. Further study should explore intervention effect at sites with lower initial provision of family planning services.
Keywords:Clinical decision support  Family medicine  Family planning services  Federally qualified health center  Primary care  Screening
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