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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Human Factors

Date Submitted: Jan 18, 2018
Open Peer Review Period: Jan 18, 2018 - Feb 15, 2018
Date Accepted: Jun 18, 2018
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Designing Emails Aimed at Increasing Family Physicians’ Use of a Web-Based Audit and Feedback Tool to Improve Cancer Screening Rates: Cocreation Process

Bravo CA, Llovet D, Witteman HO, Desveaux L, Presseau J, Saragosa M, Vaisson G, Umar S, Tinmouth J, Ivers NM

Designing Emails Aimed at Increasing Family Physicians’ Use of a Web-Based Audit and Feedback Tool to Improve Cancer Screening Rates: Cocreation Process

JMIR Hum Factors 2018;5(3):e25

DOI: 10.2196/humanfactors.9875

PMID: 30181108

PMCID: 6231866

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Designing Emails Aimed at Increasing Family Physicians’ Use of a Web-Based Audit and Feedback Tool to Improve Cancer Screening Rates: Cocreation Process

  • Caroline A. Bravo; 
  • Diego Llovet; 
  • Holly O Witteman; 
  • Laura Desveaux; 
  • Justin Presseau; 
  • Marianne Saragosa; 
  • Gratianne Vaisson; 
  • Shama Umar; 
  • Jill Tinmouth; 
  • Noah M. Ivers

Background:

Providing clinical performance data to health professionals, a process known as audit and feedback, can play an important role in health system improvement. However, audit and feedback tools can only be effective if the targeted health professionals access and actively review their data. Email is used by Cancer Care Ontario, a provincial cancer agency, to promote access to a Web-based audit and feedback tool called the Screening Activity Report (SAR); however, current emails that lack behavior change content have been ineffective at encouraging log-in to the SAR.

Objective:

The objective of our study was to describe the process and experience of developing email content that incorporates user input and behavior change techniques (BCTs) to promote the use of the SAR among Ontario primary care providers.

Methods:

Our interdisciplinary research team first identified BCTs shown to be effective in other settings that could be adapted to promote use of the SAR. We then developed draft BCT-informed email content. Next, we conducted cocreation workshops with physicians who had logged in to the SAR more than once over the past year. Participants provided reactions to researcher-developed BCT-informed content and helped to develop an email that they believed would prompt their colleagues to use the SAR. Content from cocreation workshops was brought to focus groups with physicians who had not used the SAR in the past year. We analyzed notes from the cocreation workshops and focus groups to inform decisions about content. Finally, 8 emails were created to test BCT-informed content in a 2×2×2 factorial randomized experiment.

Results:

We identified 3 key tensions during the development of the email that required us to balance user input with scientific evidence, organizational policies, and our scientific objectives, which are as follows: conflict between user preference and scientific evidence, privacy constraints around personalizing unencrypted emails with performance data, and using cocreation methods in a study with the objective of developing an email that featured BCT-informed content.

Conclusions:

Teams tasked with developing content to promote health professional engagement with audit and feedback or other quality improvement tools might consider cocreation processes for developing communications that are informed by both users and BCTs. Teams should be cautious about making decisions solely based on user reactions because what users seem to prefer is not always the same as what works. Furthermore, implementing user recommendations may not always be feasible. Teams may face challenges when using cocreation methods to develop a product with the simultaneous goal of having clearly defined variables to test in later studies. The expected role of users, evidence, and the implementation context all warrant consideration to determine whether and how cocreation methods could help to achieve design and scientific objectives.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Bravo CA, Llovet D, Witteman HO, Desveaux L, Presseau J, Saragosa M, Vaisson G, Umar S, Tinmouth J, Ivers NM

Designing Emails Aimed at Increasing Family Physicians’ Use of a Web-Based Audit and Feedback Tool to Improve Cancer Screening Rates: Cocreation Process

JMIR Hum Factors 2018;5(3):e25

DOI: 10.2196/humanfactors.9875

PMID: 30181108

PMCID: 6231866

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.