Effect of local medical opinion leaders on quality of care for acute myocardial infarction: a randomized controlled trial.

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CONTEXT

The effectiveness of recruiting local medical opinion leaders to improve quality of care is poorly understood.

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate a guideline-implementation intervention of clinician education by local opinion leaders and performance feedback to (1) increase use of lifesaving drugs (aspirin and thrombolytics in eligible elderly patients, beta-blockers in all eligible patients) for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), and (2) decrease use of a potentially harmful therapy (prophylactic lidocaine).

DESIGN

Randomized controlled trial with hospital as the unit of randomization, intervention, and analysis.

SETTING

Thirty-seven community hospitals in Minnesota.

PATIENTS

All patients with AMI admitted to study hospitals over 10 months before (1992-1993, N=2409) or after (1995-1996, N=2938) the intervention.

INTERVENTION

Using a validated survey, we identified opinion leaders at 20 experimental hospitals who influenced peers through small and large group discussions, informal consultations, and revisions of protocols and clinical pathways. They focused on (1) evidence (drug efficacy), (2) comparative performance, and (3) barriers to change. Control hospitals received mailed performance feedback.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

Hospital-specific changes before and after the intervention in the proportion of eligible patients receiving each study drug.

RESULTS

Among experimental hospitals, the median change in the proportion of eligible elderly patients receiving aspirin was +0.13 (17% increase from 0.77 at baseline), compared with a change of -0.03 at control hospitals (P=.04). For beta-blockers, the respective changes were +0.31 (63% increase from 0.49 at baseline) vs +0.18 (30% increase from baseline) for controls (P=.02). Lidocaine use declined by about 50% in both groups. The intervention did not increase thrombolysis in the elderly (from 0.73 at baseline), but nearly two thirds of eligible nonrecipients were older than 85 years, had severe comorbidities, or presented after at least 6 hours.

CONCLUSIONS

Working with opinion leaders and providing performance feedback can accelerate adoption of some beneficial AMI therapies (eg, aspirin, beta-blockers). Secular changes in knowledge and hospital protocols may extinguish outdated practices (eg, prophylactic lidocaine). However, it is more difficult to increase use of effective but riskier treatments (eg, thrombolysis) for frail elderly patients.

Investigators
Abbreviation
JAMA
Publication Date
1998-05-06
Volume
279
Issue
17
Page Numbers
1358-63
Pubmed ID
9582043
Medium
Print
Full Title
Effect of local medical opinion leaders on quality of care for acute myocardial infarction: a randomized controlled trial.
Authors
Soumerai SB, McLaughlin TJ, Gurwitz JH, Guadagnoli E, Hauptman PJ, Borbas C, Morris N, McLaughlin B, Gao X, Willison DJ, Asinger R, Gobel F