Surgical appropriateness nudges: Developing behavioral science nudges to integrate appropriateness criteria into the decision making of spine surgeons
Teryl K. Nuckols, Peggy G. Chen, Kanaka D. Shetty, Harsimran S. Brara, Neel Anand, Nabeel Qureshi, David L. Skaggs, Jason N. Doctor, Joshua M. Pevnick, Anne F. Mannion

TL;DR
This paper explores using behavioral science nudges to help spine surgeons follow appropriate surgery guidelines more consistently.
Contribution
It introduces new nudge prototypes tailored to integrate appropriateness criteria into spine surgeons' decision-making processes.
Findings
Refined nudge prototypes included score cards, online calculators, case conferences, and preoperative checks.
Pilot testing showed high acceptability and feasibility scores for the nudges among surgeons.
Case conferences received the highest scores, while online calculators had the lowest.
Abstract
Substantial variation exists in surgeon decision making. In response, multiple specialty societies have established criteria for the appropriate use of spine surgery. Yet few strategies exist to facilitate routine use of appropriateness criteria by surgeons. Behavioral science nudges are increasingly used to enhance decision making by clinicians. We sought to design “surgical appropriateness nudges” to support routine use of appropriateness criteria for degenerative lumbar scoliosis and spondylolisthesis. The work reflected Stage I of the NIH Stage Model for Behavioral Intervention Development and involved an iterative, multi-method approach, emphasizing qualitative methods. Study sites included two large referral centers for spine surgery. We recruited spine surgeons from both sites for two rounds of focus groups. To produce preliminary nudge prototypes, we examined sources of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Malpractice and Liability Issues · Patient Safety and Medication Errors · Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation
