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Curated

Advancing Patient Centered Outcomes Research in Survival Data with Unmeasured Confounding to Improve Patient Risk Communication [Methods Study], United States and Canada, 2015-2019 (ICPSR 39631)

Released/updated on: 2025-12-11
Geographic coverage: Canada, United States
Time period: 2015-01-01--2019-01-01

Researchers often use data from patients' health records to compare treatments. But many things--not just treatments--affect patients' health. To figure out whether changes in patients' health result from treatment or something else, researchers can use statistical methods called instrumental variables, or IVs. IV methods account for factors that affect health but aren't in patients' health records, such as eating habits. Existing IV methods work well when looking at health outcomes that are measured using certain types of scales, such as blood pressure. But existing methods don't work as well to measure the time until a health event occurs, particularly when an event, like death, has not occurred for many patients in the study.

In this study, the research team created and tested a new IV method to more accurately estimate how a treatment relates to the time until a health event.

Curated
Restricted

Comparing Primary Care Clinician-Focused Versus Team-Based Implementation of Advance Care Planning: Protocol for a Cluster-Randomized Control Trial, United States and Canada, 2019-2022 (ICPSR 39033)

Released/updated on: 2025-01-07
Geographic coverage: Canada, United States
Time period: 2019-01-01--2022-01-01

For people with serious chronic conditions, healthcare that defaults to all available treatments without considering patient preferences risks harms that may exceed benefits. Advance care planning (ACP) has the potential to align healthcare with what is important to patients and maximize quality of life. While primary care is where most people receive most of their care, engaging patients in ACP is not routine in primary care given competing demands and limited resources. Primary care clinicians, patients, and families agree that it is preferred to make plans before there is a medical crisis. The research team's goal was to make ACP routine in primary care and to "move it upstream" so that it included improving the quality of the last years of life as well as respecting wishes for end of life care.

This study included a comparative effectiveness trial of team-based versus individual clinician-focused ACP in primary care practices. The research team adapted Ariadne Labs' Serious Illness Care Program (SICP) and aimed to determine if a team approach produces better patient outcomes and explore factors influencing implementation of ACP across practices.

Seven practice-based research networks (PBRNs) in the United States and Canada randomized their primary care practices to team-based or individual clinician-focused versions of SICP. Team members and clinicians completed training, and implementation was supported through practice facilitation. Consented patient participants completed a baseline survey after initial conversations and follow-up surveys at 6 and 12 months later. Forty practices (21 team, 19 clinician) completed training and referred patients to the study. Half of the practices were rural, 80 percent were family medicine, and 33 percent were medical residency training sites. 535 healthcare staff completed training. Both arms trained primary care providers; the team arm also trained nurses, medical assistants, and other roles. 1,321 patients and care partners were referred; and 917 consented and were enrolled (455 from team practices, 462 from clinician). Data from 802 patients were included in the primary analyses. Qualitative implementation data was collected during practice facilitation and from practice interviews.

This collection includes quantitative data collected from primary care practices (DS1) and team members and clinicians (DS2) from study sites located in the United States.