Abstract
BackgroundDigital health interventions using hybrid delivery models may offer efficient alternatives to traditional behavioral counseling by addressing obstacles of time, resources, and knowledge. Using a computer-facilitated 5As (ask, advise, assess, assist, arrange) model as an example (CF5As), we aimed to identify factors from the perspectives of primary care providers and clinical staff that were likely to influence introduction of digital technology and a CF5As smoking cessation counseling intervention. In the CF5As model, patients self-administer a tablet intervention that provides 5As smoking cessation counseling, produces patient and provider handouts recommending next steps, and is followed by a patient-provider encounter to reinforce key cessation messages, provide assistance, and arrange follow-up.MethodsSemi-structured in-person interviews of administrative and clinical staff and primary care providers from three primary care clinics.ResultsThirty-five interviews were completed (12 administrative staff, ten clinical staff, and 13 primary care providers). Twelve were from an academic internal medicine practice, 12 from a public hospital academic general medicine clinic, and 11 from a public hospital HIV clinic. Most were women (91 %); mean age (SD) was 42 years (11.1). Perceived usefulness of the CF5As focused on its relevance for various health behavior counseling purposes, potential gains in counseling efficiency, confidentiality of data collection, occupying patients while waiting, and serving as a cue to action. Perceived ease of use was viewed to depend on the ability to accommodate: clinic workflow; heavy patient volumes; and patient characterisitics, e.g., low literacy. Social norms potentially affecting implementation included beliefs in the promise/burden of technology, priority of smoking cessation counseling relative to other patient needs, and perception of CF5As as just “one more thing to do” in an overburdened system. The most frequently cited facilitating conditions were staffing levels and smoking cessation resources and training; the most cited hindering factors were visit time constraints and patients’ complex health care needs.ConclusionsIntegrating CF5As and other technology-enhanced behavioral counseling interventions in primary care requires flexibility to accommodate work flow and perceptions of overload in dynamic environments. Identifying factors that promote and hinder CF5As adoption could inform implementation of other CF behavioral health interventions in primary care.
Highlights
Digital health interventions using hybrid delivery models may offer efficient alternatives to traditional behavioral counseling by addressing obstacles of time, resources, and knowledge
To address physician barriers and promote patient engagement in clinic-based cessation efforts, we developed a computer-facilitated 5As (CF5As) service delivery model to test its effect on 5As implementation in primary care
Applying the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) model, this pre-implementation qualitative study sought to identify from the perspectives of primary care clinic personnel, factors that might affect the implementation of technology-assisted behavioral counseling in general, and a computer-facilitated 5As model, in primary care settings
Summary
Digital health interventions using hybrid delivery models may offer efficient alternatives to traditional behavioral counseling by addressing obstacles of time, resources, and knowledge. Using a computer-facilitated 5As (ask, advise, assess, assist, arrange) model as an example (CF5As), we aimed to identify factors from the perspectives of primary care providers and clinical staff that were likely to influence introduction of digital technology and a CF5As smoking cessation counseling intervention. As a part of the HITECH Act, substantial federal financial incentives are tied to the ability of health care systems to demonstrate compliance with a number of indicators of uses of each provider’s or system’s EHR to improve the quality of care (meaningful use criteria). The purpose of these incentives is to accelerate the adoption of EHR systems among providers. As a result of these two major policy initiatives and increasing opportunities offered by some new technologies to support health care, dynamic changes are occurring in the tools and systems used to screen for and deliver behavioral counseling services in primary care
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