4.6 Article

Electronic Tools to Assist with Identification and Counseling for Overweight Patients: a Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 27, Issue 8, Pages 933-939

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-012-2022-8

Keywords

overweight; counseling; electronic health record

Funding

  1. Agency for Health care Research and Quality [T-32 HS 000078]

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Physicians often do not recognize when their patients are overweight and infrequently counsel them about weight loss. To evaluate a set of electronic health record (EHR)-embedded tools to assist with identification and counseling of overweight patients. Randomized controlled trial. Physicians at an academic general internal medicine clinic were randomized to activation of the EHR tools (n = 15) or to usual care (n = 15). Patients of these physicians were included in analyses if they had a body mass index (BMI) between 27 and 29.9 kg/m(2). The EHR tool set included: a physician point-of-care alert for overweight (BMI 27-29. 9 kg/m(2)); a counseling template to help physicians counsel patients on action plans; and an order set to facilitate entry of overweight as a diagnosis and to order relevant patient handouts. Physician documentation of overweight as a problem; documentation of weight-specific counseling; physician perceptions of the EHR tools; patient self-reported progress toward their goals and perspectives about counseling received. Patients of physicians receiving the intervention were more likely than those of usual care physicians to receive a diagnosis of overweight (22% vs. 7%; p = 0.02) and weight-specific counseling (27% vs. 15%; p = 0.02). Most patients receiving counseling in the intervention group reported increased motivation to lose weight (90%) and taking steps toward their goal (93%). Most intervention physicians agreed that the tool alerted them to patients they did not realize were overweight (91%) and improved the effectiveness of their counseling (82%); more than half (55%) reported counseling overweight patients more frequently (55%). However, most physicians used the tool infrequently because of time barriers. EHR-based alerts and management tools increased documentation of overweight and counseling frequency; the majority of patients for whom the tools were used reported short-term behavior change.

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