Authors
Alexander G Fiks, Robert W Grundmeier, Stephanie Mayne, Lihai Song, Kristen Feemster, Dean Karavite, Cayce C Hughes, James Massey, Ron Keren, Louis M Bell, Richard Wasserman, A Russell Localio
Publication date
2013/6/1
Journal
Pediatrics
Volume
131
Issue
6
Pages
1114-1124
Publisher
American Academy of Pediatrics
Description
OBJECTIVE
To improve human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination rates, we studied the effectiveness of targeting automated decision support to families, clinicians, or both.
METHODS
Twenty-two primary care practices were cluster-randomized to receive a 3-part clinician-focused intervention (education, electronic health record-based alerts, and audit and feedback) or none. Overall, 22 486 girls aged 11 to 17 years due for HPV vaccine dose 1, 2, or 3 were randomly assigned within each practice to receive family-focused decision support with educational telephone calls. Randomization established 4 groups: family-focused, clinician-focused, combined, and no intervention. We measured decision support effectiveness by final vaccination rates and time to vaccine receipt, standardized for covariates and limited to those having received the previous dose for HPV #2 and 3. The 1 …
Total citations
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