The Impact of Sharing Audio Recorded Clinic Visits on Self-management in Older Adults

Categoria Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2020
Up to eighty percent of clinic visit information is forgotten by patients immediately post-visit. This is a significant barrier to self-management, especially in older adults with multimorbidity leading to poor health outcomes. After visit summaries (AVS) can improve recall, yet concerns exist about their layout, accuracy and low patient uptake. Patients and clinicians have begun audio recording clinic visits. When patients receive an audio recording of the visit, 71% listen and 68% share it with a caregiver, resulting in greater recall. Despite its growing use, to date, there is no research on the impact of recording and sharing clinic visits of patient self-management ability, health-related outcomes or healthcare utilization. The objective of this proposal is to conduct a multi-site pilot trial evaluating the feasibility and acceptability of routinely sharing audio recordings of clinic visits (AUDIO) in older adults (≥65 years) with diabetes and hypertension. Conduct a multi-site, two-arm, parallel-group, patient-randomized, blocked, controlled, pilot trial with 3-month follow up, to determine the feasibility and acceptability of sharing audio recordings of clinic visits (AUDIO) on self-management in older adults with diabetes and hypertension, compared to the after visit written summary (AVS) alone (Usual Care). Investigators will determine: 1.1 Feasibility of a larger trial by meeting recruitment targets at each site (n=30 per site; total n=90) and determining the optimal strategy to achieve a high retention rate and adherence to the study protocol. 1.2 Acceptability by assessing the proportion of patients and clinicians who agree to take part in the project and the proportion of patients who listen to the recording. 1.3 Potential effectiveness by collecting data on the impact of audio recordings on self-management, health-related outcomes, healthcare utilization, and clinician behavior. Investigators hypothesize that compared to those receiving UC, patients randomized to also receive audio recordings (AUDIO) of clinic visits will report a greater self-management activation (Patient Activation Measure - Short Form) at 3 months. Investigators will also explore whether the effect of AUDIO on self-management activation compared to UC is greater for patients with low health literacy than those with high health literacy.
Epistemonikos ID: 9c64ee3fc014947ec0d0f0750a29d60057763d25
First added on: May 07, 2024