Clinical decisions made in primary care clinics before and after choosing wisely™

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Abstract

Background: The Choosing Wisely™ campaign encourages physicians to avoid low-value care. Although widely lauded, no study has examined its impact on clinical decisions made in primary care settings. Methods: We compared clinical decisions made for 5 Choosing Wisely recommendations over two 6-month time periods before and after the campaign launch and an educational intervention to promote it at 3 primary care residency clinics. Results: The rate of recommendations adherence was high (93.2%) at baseline but did significantly increase to 96.5% after the launch. These findings suggest primary care physicians respond to training and publicity in low-value care, though further research is needed. Conclusion: Given that even small decreases of physician test ordering can produce large cost savings, the Choosing Wisely project may help achieve the health care triple aim.

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Kost, A., Genao, I., Lee, J. W., & Smith, S. R. (2015). Clinical decisions made in primary care clinics before and after choosing wiselyTM. Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine, 28(4), 471–474. https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.2015.05.140332

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