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Improving Rates of Outpatient Influenza Vaccination Through EHR Portal Messages and Interactive Automated Calls: A Randomized Controlled Trial

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BackgroundPatient reminders for influenza vaccination, delivered via electronic health record (EHR) patient portal messages and interactive voice response (IVR) calls, offer an innovative approach to improving patient care.ObjectiveTo test the… Click to show full abstract

BackgroundPatient reminders for influenza vaccination, delivered via electronic health record (EHR) patient portal messages and interactive voice response (IVR) calls, offer an innovative approach to improving patient care.ObjectiveTo test the effectiveness of portal and IVR outreach in improving rates of influenza vaccination.DesignRandomized controlled trial of EHR portal messages and IVR calls promoting influenza vaccination.ParticipantsAdults with no documented influenza vaccination 2 months after the start of influenza season (2014–2015).InterventionUsing a factorial design, we assigned 20,000 patients who were active portal users to one of four study arms: (a) receipt of a portal message promoting influenza vaccines, (b) receipt of IVR call with similar content, (c) both a and b, or (d) neither (usual care). We randomized 10,000 non-portal users to receipt of IVR call or usual care. In all intervention arms, information on pneumococcal vaccination was included if the targeted patient was overdue for pneumococcal vaccine.Main MeasuresEHR-documented influenza vaccination during the 2014–2015 influenza season, measured April 2015.Key ResultsAmong portal users, 14.0% (702) of those receiving both portal messages and calls, 13.4% (669) of message recipients, 12.8% (642) of call recipients, and 11.6% (582) of those with usual care received vaccines. On multivariable analysis of portal users, those receiving portal messages alone (OR 1.20, 95% CI 1.06–1.35) or IVR calls alone (OR 1.15 95% CI 1.02–1.30) were more likely than usual care recipients to be vaccinated. Those receiving both messages and calls were also more likely than the usual care group to be vaccinated (ad hoc analysis, using a Bonferroni correction: OR 1.29, 97.5% CI 1.13, 1.48). Among non-portal users, 8.5% of call recipients and 8.6% of usual care recipients received influenza vaccines (p = NS). Pneumococcal vaccination rates showed no significant improvement.ConclusionsOur outreach achieved a small but significant improvement in influenza vaccination rates.Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT02266277 (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02266277).

Keywords: portal users; usual care; portal messages; influenza vaccination; vaccination

Journal Title: Journal of General Internal Medicine
Year Published: 2017

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