Abstract
Background:
Physician Asthma Care Education (PACE) is a programme developed in the USA to improve paediatric asthma outcomes.
Aims:
To examine translation of PACE to Australia.
Methods:
The RE-AIM framework was used to assess translation. Demographic characteristics and findings regarding clinical asthma outcomes from PACE randomised clinical trials in both countries were examined. Qualitative content analysis was used to examine fidelity to intervention components.
Results:
Both iterations of PACE reached similar target audiences (general practice physicians and paediatric patients with asthma); however, in the USA, more children with persistent disease were enrolled. In both countries, participation comprised approximately 10% of eligible physicians and 25% of patients. In both countries, PACE deployed well-known local physicians and behavioural scientists as facilitators. Sponsorship of the programme was provided by professional associations and government agencies. Fidelity to essential programme elements was observed, but PACE Australia workshops included additional components. Similar outcomes included improvements in clinician confidence in developing short-term and long-term care plans, prescribing inhaled corticosteroids, and providing written management instructions to patients. No additional time was spent in the patient visit compared with controls. US PACE realised reductions in symptoms and healthcare use, results that could not be confirmed in Australia because of limitations in follow-up time and sample sizes. US PACE is maintained through a National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute website. Development of maintenance strategies for PACE Australia is underway.
Conclusions:
Based on criteria of the RE-AIM framework, the US version of PACE has been successfully translated for use in Australia.
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Introduction
The prevalence of asthma in both the USA and Australia is among the highest in the world,1 with 10% (2 million) of Australians and 8.2% (24.6 million) of the US population reporting a physician's diagnosis.2,3 In each country, urgent healthcare use and school absenteeism for children attributable to asthma are well above national averages.2,3
Physician Asthma Care Education (PACE) is an interactive seminar developed in the USA for general practice physicians (Box 1). Delivered by a team including an asthma specialist, a general practice paediatrician and a behavioural scientist, PACE provides concepts and skills for primary care clinicians on how to use the best clinical therapies for asthma, communicate more effectively with patients, and support patients' management efforts (Table 1).4 In the USA, efficacy and effectiveness trials of PACE illustrated improved physician practices, patient perceptions of physician behaviour, children's symptoms, and urgent healthcare use.4,5 Physicians who received the PACE intervention spent the same amount of time in clinical encounters with patients as non-PACE physicians.
In Australia, a trial of PACE was conducted after adaptation of the programme to the Australian health system.6,7 Significant outcomes included more children receiving written asthma action plans and prescribed medications more closely aligned with children's clinical pattern of asthma.
The research presented here examined the translation of PACE from the USA to Australia by comparing characteristics of the study population, similarities and differences in intervention components, patient/provider outcomes, and maintenance efforts.
Methods
The Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework is an approach developed in the USA to assess the public health impact of an intervention (Box 2).8 The dimensions of RE-AIM, as used in this study, are presented in Table 2.8,9
Data from the randomised controlled trials of effectiveness of PACE in the USA and Australia were used to populate dimensions of RE-AIM. Study methods for the PACE trials are described elsewhere.4,5,7 The US trial was conducted between 2001 and 2004 and the Australia trial was conducted between 2006 and 2009. Study procedures for both the US and Australian trials received prior ethical approval from sponsoring institutions.5,7 In both the US and Australia, participating clinicians provided informed consent for their participation and, before telephone contact, the participating paediatricians sent a letter that explained the study to each household of potential study participants. Parents of patients could contact the physician's office to have their names removed from the list of potential participants. In the US trial, 101 primary care physicians were surveyed and 870 parents of their paediatric patients with asthma completed baseline interviews; 731 patients provided follow-up data detailing clinical information, perceptions of care provided, and performance of their physician. In the Australian trial, a total of 122 general practitioners and 221 patients completed baseline interviews and 213 patients completed follow-up interviews based on the same items posed to US participants. Data collection methods in both countries included telephone interviews and, in the US, verification through medical records. In the US the follow-up period was 24 months and in Australia it was 12 months. Similar analytical techniques were employed within both countries' trials to examine sample characteristics and evaluate the impact of the PACE intervention on outcomes: symptoms, healthcare use, and clinical practices. Descriptive statistics (means and standard deviations, and frequencies) and multivariate regression (specifically linear, logistic, and Poisson regression) adjusting for appropriate confounders were employed.4,5,7
Similarities and differences in implementation of the intervention together with maintenance efforts were assessed through a qualitative content analysis of PACE programme protocols as applied in the US and Australia and related programme documents. A list of essential intervention components developed in the efficacy trial of PACE was generated in the form of codes.4 Facilitator intervention manuals for both the US and Australia were matched by code for intervention components to ascertain similarities and differences in essential elements. Quantitative evaluation results and qualitative content analyses were then assigned to criteria of the RE-AIM framework (see Table 2).
In Australia the PACE acronym was changed to Practitioner Asthma Communication and Education to reflect the fact that a core aspect of the programme was the importance of communication.
Results
Reach
The reach dimension in the RE-AIM framework examines the representativeness and proportion of individuals who are willing to participate in a given intervention8 — in this case, the extent to which target physicians participated in PACE and the extent to which they served targeted patient groups. Criteria for participating physicians in both the US and Australia included being a primary care provider to children with asthma. In the Australian study children with asthma aged 2–14 years were included while, in the US, children with asthma aged 2–12 years were included in the study. The inclusion criteria also included the absence of any other disease with pulmonary complications and at least one hospitalisation, emergency department (ED) visit, or urgent office visit for asthma within the previous 2 years.
In the US, PACE was evaluated in 10 cities. A total of 101 paediatricians from a list of 1,219 general practitioners who fully met the criteria for participation agreed to participate and provided consent; 94 physicians provided baseline data. A list of 3,368 of their patients was generated, of which 2,300 who met the inclusion criteria were randomly selected for participation. Of these, 870 families consented to participate. In Australia, 2,209 general practitioners comprised lists in two regions in Sydney, 150 met the inclusion criteria and expressed interest and, of these, 122 consented to participate. A list of 1,290 of their patients was generated, of whom 235 met the eligibility criteria and 221 agreed to participate. In both the US and Australia, the proportion of the population willing to participate in PACE was approximately 5–8% of general practitioners and 17–25% of their paediatric asthma patients. The major reason for non-participation of physicians in both countries was time constraints, but a number of US physicians declined because they believed they were already compliant with guideline-recommended asthma care.10 Although self-reported rates of adherence to asthma guidelines are low (between 39% and 53%), some barriers that physicians face in implementing guideline-recommended care include inertia of previous practice (i.e. inability to change practice patterns).11,12
Tables 3 and 4 show the characteristics of clinicians and patients who participated in PACE in the US and Australia. Table 3 shows that, in both countries, the majority of physicians were licensed as general practitioners, worked in a group practice setting, and had an average length of time in practice of nearly two decades. More male than female physicians participated in PACE in the US while the reverse was the case in Australia.
Table 4 shows that both US and Australian parents and patients whose physicians participated in PACE were similar in terms of educational attainment, household income, and level of children's baseline urgent care use for asthma. The mean age of children reached was similar. Three times as many US patients had symptoms consistent with persistent asthma. The percentage or parents who smoked was the same in both countries.
Effectiveness
The effectiveness dimension in the RE-AIM framework examines the impact of an intervention on important outcomes.8 Table 5 shows outcomes assessed in both the US and Australia related to physicians' confidence in delivering aspects of asthma care, parent perception of the clinician's care, and child health outcomes. In both countries the PACE intervention improved the clinician's confidence to develop short-term and long-term asthma care plans and to review them with their patients. In Australia, general practitioners also reported increased confidence in using the Asthma Cycle of Care, the national programme that provides reimbursement for routine follow-up for asthma patients. General practitioners in both countries reported no differences in time spent with patients for both newly diagnosed and previously diagnosed patients.5,7
Patients in Australia were more likely to have been given an asthma action plan and, in the US, comparable written instructions on how to use medicines at home. Prescriptions for inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) improved in both countries. In Australia, fewer patients with intermittent disease were given ICS whereas, in the US, more newly diagnosed patients were treated with ICS including combination drugs (e.g. Advair). Parents in the US rated physicians' performance higher on several behaviours: finding out the family's biggest asthma concern; informing the parent that the child could be fully active; and asking the parent if the child has met specific goals of therapy.
Given the patient sample size and duration of the study in the US, it was possible to assess healthcare utilisation at 12 and 24 months post-intervention. There were significant reductions at 12 months in the number of days of activity limitation attributable to asthma and the number of ED visits. Two-year follow-up evaluation in the US showed that children whose physicians participated in PACE had significant reductions compared with controls in symptoms and urgent care use — specifically, fewer sleep disruptions from asthma symptoms; fewer ED visits, hospitalisations, and urgent office visits; and fewer telephone calls to the doctor's office.13 Because of the shorter study duration and smaller sample size, it was not possible to assess these effects in Australia. However, it is reasonable to assume that, given the similarity of other key outcomes, Australia PACE could be expected to realise comparative results regarding healthcare use since asthma-related urgent care use in both the US and Australia stem from deficiencies in patient education.2,14
Adoption
Adoption in the RE-AIM framework is to assess similarities in communities in terms of resources and intervention agents (people who deliver the programme) who are willing to initiate a programme.8 Because the social cognitive theoretical basis of PACE considers the use of credible role models central to change, appropriate intervention deliverers are deemed critical to its effectiveness. The intervention in both the US and Australia deployed well-known local general practice physician leaders, asthma specialists, and behavioural scientists as facilitators at intervention sites. Leaders were chosen based on their background, reputation in the community, and engagement with an organisation that provides continuing medical education (CME) credit to physicians. Each PACE team was trained by the programme coordinators to deliver the intervention according to a standardised protocol.
In both countries, local general practitioner professional societies provided support with recruitment of physicians for the intervention. Programme coordination in Australia was provided by the University of Sydney in collaboration with the Woolcock Institute of Medical Research and the Center for Adolescent Health, Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne. The Center for Managing Chronic Disease at the University of Michigan coordinated the programme in the US. In both countries, funding for the evaluation of PACE was provided by government agencies and foundations. Specifically, in Australia the trial was funded by the Australian Government Department of Health and Aging, Chronic Disease Programs and, in the US, funding was provided by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the National, Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI).
Implementation
Implementation in the RE-AIM framework refers to fidelity to key components of an intervention protocol and consistent delivery.8 A comparison of essential programme elements for the PACE programme in the US and Australia is shown in Table 1. Essential components of PACE include guideline-recommended clinical practices, 10 communication strategies, 10 specific patient asthma education messages, clinical case studies, and remuneration options. Based on a feasibility study of PACE in Australia with 25 general practitioners, it was adapted to the Australian setting with additional activities, and asthma care content was changed to reflect Australia's clinical guidelines for the diagnosis and management of asthma.6 In Australia the workshops were extended by an hour and included activities such as practice in writing action plans, a brief quiz show to demonstrate content mastery, and asthma device demonstrations and practice. Each participant received a set of placebo asthma inhalers, spacers, peak flow meters, and model airways.
Because of differences between the two countries in how healthcare is financed, the original remuneration content was reshaped for the Australian programme. In the US the remuneration content included a review of CPT and ICD-9 codes for asthma consultations and education. In Australia, the remuneration content included a review of the Asthma Cycle of Care plan, which is a national programme in Australia that gives providers incentives in the form of reimbursement for implementing guideline-recommended care for asthma patients.15 One of the objectives of PACE Australia was to help general practitioners achieve the goals of the Asthma Cycle of Care.15
The delivery cost of PACE in the US ranged from $2,500 to $5,500, which included honoraria for facilitators, dinner for physician participants, equipment rental, CME fees, and participant kits and handouts.10 In Australia, similar expenses totaled about $2,000 Australian dollars.7
Maintenance
Maintenance in RE-AIM refers to long-term follow-up to assess outcomes for participants in the intervention and the extent to which a programme becomes an ongoing part of routine organisational practices and policies.8 As noted previously, two-year follow-up evaluation in the US demonstrated that patients of physicians who participated in PACE had a significant reduction in symptoms and urgent care use compared with controls. Due to funding limitations, Australia was not able to assess long-term outcomes of PACE such as healthcare utilisation; however, as noted, similar benefits could arguably be expected with additional follow-up, given the findings of the US evaluation.
In the US there is evidence of maintenance of the programme as a result of continued access to the intervention for physicians and expansion to new locales. US PACE is freely available through the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute website.16 The National Asthma Control Initiative, a National Institutes of Health effort to support implementation of asthma guidelines, has also made PACE information and training available.17 PACE has been offered in communities across the US. Maintenance strategies for PACE Australia are being actively explored nationwide through the National Asthma Council of Australia and government agencies.
Discussion
Main findings
Translation of PACE in Australia produced similar improvements in clinicians' practice observed in the US — specifically, providing prescriptions for ICS and written asthma management plans and instructions to patients. In addition to these outcomes, US PACE also generated significant reductions in symptoms and healthcare use. Essential characteristics of participating physicians and patients were similar in both countries. Programme fidelity was observed and delivery procedures the same. Careful pilot work contributed to translation.
Interpretation of findings in relation to previously published work
PACE achieved important asthma outcomes in two countries where guideline-recommended practices for asthma are much less evident among general practitioners than asthma specialists. The need for building general practitioner capacity has been discussed in the literature of both countries.18,19
Nearly all efforts to provide CME face challenges. Competing practice demands of physicians are great as practitioners must respond to heavy clinical service expectations and have many CME opportunities from a variety of conventional sources.10 Attracting physicians to CME is a challenge. Methods of recruitment for the PACE studies that included face-to-face contact with clinicians from a medical peer was found to be essential in gaining clinician interest in a programme with somewhat high participation expectations.
PACE programme coordination efforts by institutions with a track record for asthma-related outreach in local communities proved useful for obtaining practitioner buy-in and comprised an important CME recruitment strategy, as did efforts to appeal to clinician priorities. For example, to address the perception of poor remuneration for patient education, in the US the reimbursement module illustrated how to make optimum documentation, coding, and billing.20 An additional attractive feature of PACE in both countries was the lack of conflict of financial interest, often evident when pharmaceutical companies sponsor CME activities.10
The proportion of eligible practitioners — and therefore their patients — willing to participate in the intervention was low in both the US and Australia. The added burden of randomised controlled trial evaluation probably contributed to the lower rate. These challenges are common in primary care trials.21 Added evaluation burdens probably reduced attractiveness to busy clinicians. When these extra requirements are not needed, participation levels are higher.22
Strengths and limitations of this study
RE-AIM has been used to plan, evaluate, and review a variety of health promotion and disease management interventions and has appeared in over 150 published studies.23 As an assessment tool, RE-AIM proved useful in framing the important dimensions of assessment and those most important for ensuring reach, impact, and sustainability. In Australia, PACE used an abbreviated outcome assessment tool at each time point as there were concerns about the burden for physicians and patients if the original longer US versions were used. However, key evaluation questions were preserved to ensure that important comparisons could be made.
Australia and the US have similarities including a dominant language, political structures, and medical practice. The study did not examine translation to a venue with dramatically different features from those in the US. Coordinating entities in both countries were academic institutions. Translation by other types of organisations was not tested.
Implications for future research, policy, and practice
Translation of evidence-based programmes in chronic disease management has been widely described as a priority of healthcare delivery.24–26 The US National Institutes of Health Roadmap for Medical Research recently expanded research translation steps to encourage practice-based research (T3) that improves incorporation of research discoveries into day-to-day clinical care.27 This study contributed to understanding dimensions of translation of physician education from one locale to another. Based on the RE-AIM framework for assessing translation and dissemination of interventions, US PACE has been successfully translated for use in Australia. To our knowledge, the analysis presented here is the first to use the RE-AIM framework to assess the translation of a childhood asthma intervention between countries with varying economic, political, and health system structures. Given that both the US and Australia face similar challenges with managing asthma, PACE may be most effective in regions where asthma morbidity stems from deficiencies in guideline-recommended care and patient education associated with asthma.
Several translation lessons were learned. Given the extent of the modifications of PACE needed for the Australian healthcare setting,6 an important aspect of adaptation is for intervention activities to be piloted and appropriately tailored to the new target population while, at the same time, assuring fidelity to the key elements of the original programme. For example, in the Australian programme the term ‘physician’ was changed to ‘practitioner’ to recognise the range of clinicians seeing asthma patients. PACE has been adapted for nurses in the clinical setting by Education for Health in the UK and a version is available to nurses online through their website.28 It is likely that further adaptations for asthma educators and respiratory therapists could contribute to improved outcomes for children with asthma. Elements needed in such pilot processes to ensure effective adoption deserves study in future research. Given the extent of evaluation of PACE through rigorous designs, simple evaluations could be employed in translating PACE to other regions — for example, training all members of a group practice together and collecting only post-programme process information. Lastly, translation of PACE relied heavily on successful partnerships with local physicians. Thus, it is also important that programme coordination and intervention delivery achieve active engagement of influential members of the target population in the community undertaking translation.
Conclusion
Translation of the evidence-based US PACE programme to Australia achieved successful deployment of key intervention components, reach to a similar clinician and patient audience, and similar outcomes including appropriate provision of ICS, written asthma management plans, and instructions to patients. US PACE achieved significant improvements in symptoms and reduced healthcare use in patients, and the results are expected to be comparable in Australia in a larger sample of patients. Based on the criteria of the RE-AIM framework, the US version of PACE has been successfully translated for use in Australia.
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Acknowledgements
Handling editor Hilary Pinnock
Statistical review Gopal Netuveli
The authors would like to thank Katherine Faiver (University of Michigan) and Pin-Pin Song (University of Michigan) for their assistance with formatting this manuscript, and Edward Green (University of Michigan) for statistical assistance.
Funding In Australia this work was supported by the Australian Government Department of Health and Aging, Asthma Management Program and, in the USA, by the National, Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (Princeton, NJ).
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MRP and SS contributed to study concept and design, analysis and interpretation of the data, and drafting and revision of the manuscript. MDC, SS, CM, BT, CJ, and RWB contributed to drafting and revision of the manuscript. NMC contributed to study concept and design, interpretation of the data, and drafting and revision of the manuscript.
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Competing interests
SS and RWB have received research support from Astra Zeneca Pharmaceuticals. MDC and RWB have been advisors and members of the Merck Pharmaceuticals speaker's bureau. MRP, SS, CJ, BT, CM, and NMC have no conflicts of interest in relation to this article.
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Patel, M., Shah, S., Cabana, M. et al. Translation of an evidence-based asthma intervention: Physician Asthma Care Education (PACE) in the United States and Australia. Prim Care Respir J 22, 29–36 (2013). https://doi.org/10.4104/pcrj.2012.00093
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.4104/pcrj.2012.00093
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