Feasibility Test of Action Planning in Pediatric IBD

Participation Deadline: 03/01/2026
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Description

Quality of care for youth with chronic disease suffers because of gaps in care coordination and communication among patients/families and multiple health care providers. As youth with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) have preventive and acute care needs beyond those of peers, IBD provides an excellent use case to evaluate interventions to enhance coordination and improve quality. Electronic health records (EHRs) have unfulfilled potential to facilitate coordination and effective action among teams of providers and families. This project leverages web-based and mobile phone application access points to share patient-specific information from an IBD center’s EHR. The intervention, MyIBD, has been developed with systematic input from patients, families, and providers. Our objective is to assess the feasibility of delivering tailored guidance on IBD-related health needs to families and care team members using a low-cost, low-risk health communication innovation using existing health information technology. The rationale is that brief, actionable, individually tailored guidance from IBD specialists to families and other providers will support decisions about seeking and providing timely preventive and acute care. Though the intervention builds on prior work and evidence and has been pilot tested, it requires feasibility testing in practice prior to large-scale evaluation. We will assess feasibility of MyIBD through a pilot randomized, controlled trial at one site (n=60). The study has three research aims: (1) assess the feasibility of a rollout effectiveness trial design; (2) assess the feasibility and acceptability of implementing MyIBD in a pediatric IBD clinic; (3) explore the feasibility of MyIBD to improve (a) care quality measures collected from participants and the EHR and (b) patient self-management. In Aim 1 we will assess subject recruitment, randomization, retention, intervention completion, and contamination of control subjects using a study log. For Aim 2 we will use interviews (will take place after completion of the feasibility trial) and surveys to learn about barriers and facilitators of adoption by IBD clinics and acceptability and appropriateness from the perspectives of patients/families and care providers. For Aim 3 we will use surveys and medical record data to explore change over time in family-reported care quality, patient self-management, and completion of guideline-supported quality indicators for pediatric IBD for intervention and control groups. This project is innovative in seeking to change the default ways that care team members share information and address shared responsibilities. MyIBD targets well-described barriers to coordination and incorporates behavioral strategies of individual tailoring, family participation, expert modeling, and facilitation to streamline information delivery and enhance its relevance, accessibility, and actionability. The proposed study is significant because of its potential to improve health through a low-cost intervention to enhance use of existing health information technology. The study’s findings could provide a framework for EHR-supported quality improvements through learning health system research across a range of childhood-onset chronic diseases.