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Impact evaluation of a brief online training module on physician use of the Maryland, USA, Prescription Drug Monitoring Program
UMB Dataset

UID: 188

Author(s): Oluwasanmi O. Adenaiye, Julia B. Zirpoli, Marissa Tan, Brendan F. Day, Olayiwola Bolaji, Clifford S. Mitchell, Marianne Cloeren* * Corresponding Author
Description
This study evaluated the effectiveness of a brief online educational intervention in increasing the use of Maryland Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMP). An email was sent to clinicians in Maryland who were licensed to prescribe controlled dangerous substances. The email contained a link to a project landing page where users had to register to complete a training module. The module included a baseline questionnaire, fictional cases of clinical situations to be made before and after receiving PDMP data, orientation to the Maryland PDMP, a post-training questionnaire, and the option to participate in a follow-up survey. Data from the training module was collected between June 2018 and March 2019. PDMP use data was collected from the Chesapeake Regional Information System for our Patients (CRISP) database. 178 participants who started the training module were eligible to be included in the study.
Timeframe
2018 - 2019
Subject of Study
Subject Domain
Keywords
Access via OSF

Repo containing de-identified data files, PDMP questions and PDMP post-survey.

Access Restrictions
Unrestricted access
Access Instructions
Data has been uploaded to the Open Science Framework (OSF). Supporting information including module link, quiz questions, questionnaires and additional results tables are linked within the article's Supporting Information.
Associated Publications
Data Type
Software Used
G-power®
iSpring Learn
iSpring Suite 9.0
R 3.6.3
SAS 9.3
Study Type
Observational
Dataset Format(s)
DOCX, SAS7BDAT, HTML
Data Collection Instruments
Sharable Content Object Reference Model (SCORM)
Dataset Size
1.76 MB
Grant Support
1UL1TR003098/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (U.S.)
5 U60OH011154/National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
NU17CE924961/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)