Understanding and Discouraging Overuse of Potentially Harmful Screening Tests
Preventive Screening, Prostate Cancer, Osteoporosis
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Preventive Screening
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Women between ages 50 to 85
- Men between ages 50 to 85
- Eligible for exemplar service of interest (see below for specifics of inclusion/exclusion for specific services)
Exclusion Criteria:
- Current treatment of psychosis
- History of alcohol or substance abuse within the last 2 years
- Dementia or other severe cognitive dysfunction
- serious medical illnesses with a life expectancy of less than 2 years (e.g., metastatic cancer)
- inability to speak and understand English
- blindness
- presentation for an acute medical visit
- no telephone number
Osteoporosis Screening (women aged 50-64)
Exclusion Criteria:
- a personal history of osteoporosis
- a personal history of moderate or severe osteopenia
- BMI (body mass index) < 18.5
- personal history of non-traumatic fracture
- family history of hip fracture
- current smoking
- current use of prednisone (>30 consecutive days)
- alcohol use of 3 or more drinks/day.
Prostate Cancer screening (men aged 50-69)
Exclusion Criteria:
- a prior history of prostate cancer
Colorectal Cancer Screening (men and women aged 76-85)
Exclusion Criteria:
- prior history of colorectal cancer
- adenomatous colon polyps > 6mm (or 2 or more < 6mm)
- symptoms referable to colorectal cancer
Sites / Locations
- Duke Primary Care Research Consortium
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Arm 4
Experimental
Active Comparator
Experimental
Experimental
Quantitative
Qualitative
Narrative
Framed
In the quantitative arm, we will present harms as absolute risks in the Quantitative Information Sheet. Compared with other risk formats, absolute risks have been shown to improve understanding relative to other common risk formats.
In the qualitative arm, we will describe harms using verbal descriptors (such as rare, uncommon, fairly common, and common) in the Qualitative Information Sheet.
In the narrative arm, we will present harms using patient narratives (i.e. descriptions in which patients describe their experience with decision making about potentially harmful screening services)in the Narrative Information Sheet. To address concerns in the literature that characteristics of the narrator independently influence narrative effect, we will present narratives in paper format with a banner of culturally diverse age-appropriate pictures shown at the top.
In the framed arm, we will frame not screening with potentially harmful services as beneficial (i.e. use a gain frame). In the Framed Information Sheet, we will highlight the harms that could be avoided by not getting screened.