Better incentives needed
“We believe this shows that refinement of the nudges is needed, as well as changes to clinician incentives to overcome barriers to implementation of GDMT during hospitalizations for AHF,” Dr. Ahmad said.
Responding to a postpresentation question on whether the postdischarge phase might be a more effective time to intervene with nudges, Dr. Ahmad observed that many clinicians who care for patients in the hospital assume that someone else will have the patient receive appropriate meds after discharge. “But we know that things that are started in the hospital tend to stick better.
“I do think that a lot of the clinicians were thinking, ‘I’m just going to get this patient out and someone in the outside will get them on GDMT,’ ” he said.
In the United States there are many incentives to reduce hospital length of stay and to expedite discharge so more beds are available for incoming patients, Dr. Ahmad observed. “I think it’s a combination of these kinds of perverse incentives that are not allowing us to get patients on appropriate GDMT during hospitalization.”
Furthermore, Dr. Ahmad told this news organization, “additions to the EHR should be evaluated in an evidence-based manner. However, the opposite has occurred, with an unregulated data tsunami crushing clinicians, which has been bad both for the clinicians and for patients.”
The study was funded by AstraZeneca. Dr. Ahmad discloses receiving research funding from and consulting for AstraZeneca; and receiving research funding from Boehringer Ingelheim, Cytokinetics, and Relypsa. Three other coauthors are employees of AstraZeneca.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.