TY - JOUR AU - Veroff, David R. AU - Ochoa-Arvelo, Tamara AU - Venator, Benjamin PY - 2013 DA - 2013/02/07 TI - A randomized study of telephonic care support in populations at risk for musculoskeletal preference-sensitive surgeries JO - BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making SP - 21 VL - 13 IS - 1 AB - The rate of elective surgeries varies dramatically by geography in the United States. For many of these surgeries, there is not clear evidence of their relative merits over alternate treatment choices and there are significant tradeoffs in short- and long-term risks and benefits of selecting one treatment option over another. Conditions and symptoms for which there is this lack of a single clear evidence-based treatment choice present great opportunities for patient and provider collaboration on decision making; back pain and joint osteoarthritis are two such ailments. A number of decision aids are in active use to encourage this shared decision-making process. Decision aids have been assessed in formal studies that demonstrate increases in patient knowledge, increases in patient-provider engagement, and reduction in surgery rates. These studies have not widely demonstrated the added benefit of health coaching in support of shared decision making nor have they commonly provided strong evidence of cost reductions. In order to add to this evidence base, we undertook a comparative study testing the relative impact on health utilization and costs of active outreach through interactive voice response technology to encourage health coaching in support of shared decision making in comparison to mailed outreach or no outreach. This study focused on individuals with back pain or joint pain. SN - 1472-6947 UR - https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-13-21 DO - 10.1186/1472-6947-13-21 ID - Veroff2013 ER -