FDA DOCUMENTATION FOR THE GENERIC CLEARANCE,
“TESTING
COMMUNICATIONS ON BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTS”
(0910-0687)
.
TITLE OF INFORMATION COLLECTION: Focus Group Study of Healthcare Provider Knowledge of Biosimilar Biological Products
DESCRIPTION OF THIS SPECIFIC COLLECTION
Statement of need:
The purpose of this project is to conduct focus groups with healthcare providers to identify their knowledge, perceptions, attitudes, and information needs related to biosimilar biological products. FDA will use these formative research results to create messages and materials for a biosimilars education campaign.
Through comments received to the various biosimilar guidance and public hearing dockets and through other mechanisms, many stakeholders emphasized the importance of FDA engaging in public and healthcare provider educational outreach on biosimilars in order for these products to be successfully adopted by the U.S. community. FDA learned from companies marketing biosimilars in Europe, among others, that the level of positive support from local governments and regulatory decision makers was one of the strong influences on the uptake of biosimilars in some areas of the European market. In order to develop the messages and materials for a biosimilar education campaign targeted to healthcare providers, FDA must first understand the gaps in healthcare providers’ knowledge regarding biosimilars. What is learned from these focus groups will guide the development of biosimilar educational messages and materials.
We will conduct ten in-person focus groups with healthcare providers at two multisite medical facilities. Each focus group will last 90 minutes and will have 6-8 participants.
Five of the healthcare provider focus groups will take place at Baylor Scott & White Health in Dallas, TX, and the remaining five healthcare provider focus groups will take place at a second clinical site TBD.
Intended use of information:
FDA will use the results of this formative research to develop an education and outreach campaign targeting physicians, pharmacists, and other healthcare providers. The study results will ensure that the campaign’s messages/materials communicate key information, address any misperceptions about biosimilar products, and utilize communication channels trusted by the target audiences. FDA recognizes that the data collected will not be statistically representative of population segments characterized by the groups.
The data will not be used for the purposes of making policy or regulatory decisions.
Description of respondents:
We will conduct ten 90-minute focus groups (n=8 per group; n=80 total) with healthcare providers at medical facilities in Dallas, TX, and site TBD. We will conduct the groups with five different audience segments:
Rheumatologists (2 groups)
Oncologists / Hematologists (2 groups, mixed specialties)
Dermatologists / Nephrologists (2 groups, mixed specialties)
Pharmacists (2 groups)
Nurse practitioners / Physician assistants (2 groups, mixed)
Date(s) to be Conducted:
We plan to conduct the healthcare provider focus groups in December 2014 or January 2015.
How the Information is being collected:
For each 90-minute focus group, a trained moderator will lead the discussion using a semi-structured moderator’s guide that ensures consistency in major topics but allows flexibility in probing each group on particular questions.
During the groups, a note taker will observe and document the major themes in each session. With the consent of participants, we will audio and video record each session, produce a written transcript of the discussion, and use the transcript to supplement the team’s notes. We also will live video stream each focus group using a secure, password-protected system (e.g., Adobe Connect) so that research staff can observe the sessions remotely. We will provide cash incentives to participants at the end of each session.
At the end of each group, the moderator and note taker will summarize the discussion. Summaries will not contain any identifying information. Notes will be stored in a locked filing cabinet in the project director’s office, and recordings and electronic materials will be stored on a password-protected server accessible only to the research team.
Confidentiality of Respondents:
At the beginning of each group, we will explain the importance of protecting others’ confidentiality. We also will ensure participants understand that their participation is voluntary and that they can skip questions or stop participating at any time. We will protect participants’ confidentiality by not using full names in our notes, recordings, or transcripts and by storing all notes or recordings in a locked filing cabinet in the project director’s office (hardcopy) or on a password-protected server (electronic). We will assure participants that research findings and reports will not contain any personal information.
The recruitment coordinators at each medical facility will store screening information in locked file cabinets (hardcopy) or on a password-protected computer (electronic) in order to invite respondents and send them reminder letters / calls. Only the recruitment coordinators will have access to this information; FDA and its contractor (RTI) will be provided de-identified screening data for participants (i.e., first names only, no other contact info). Names of participants will be used solely to facilitate contact. After the study is completed, the coordinators will destroy the screening information.
FDA and RTI will not have the full names or any contact information for any of the participants. Therefore, there will be no link between the data collected and the participants’ identities.
Amount and justification for any proposed incentive
Healthcare providers—and, in particular, specialists—are a notoriously difficult population to recruit and retain in qualitative research. Providers are typically busy individuals who may work irregular shifts, be overcommitted, and need to respond to clinical emergencies. Consequently, we will offer meaningful financial incentives to ensure adequate participation.
Based on our experience with this population and recent consultation with market research firms, we recommend offering incentives of $225 for pharmacists, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants and $300 for physicians. These incentives are close to current market rates for 90-minute focus groups in the selected cities and should help ensure high participation and show rates.
Questions of a Sensitive Nature
We do not anticipate asking any sensitive questions in the focus groups. Instead, the questions will focus on individuals’ knowledge and attitudes toward biological and biosimilar products. For healthcare providers, we also will ask generally about their experience prescribing biological products.
Nevertheless, respondents will be told that they may skip any question that they do not want to answer or may stop participating at any time.
Description of Statistical Methods
We do not plan to use formal statistical methods in this study but rather qualitative analysis methods.
Specifically, we will obtain verbatim transcripts of the sessions based on the audio and video recordings. We will then review each transcript, have two team members independently code participant responses, and organize responses into a meta-matrix that segments responses by topic and audience segment (e.g., knowledge of biosimilars x rheumatologists). This step serves to reduce or summarize the data, while also facilitating the recognition of patterns within it (Gale, Heath, Cameron, Rashid, & Redwood, 2013).
At this point, the research team will note regularities, patterns, and other explanations in the data (Miles & Huberman, 1994). This analytic approach will allow us to determine what knowledge, attitudes, perceptions, and decision processes are consistent across healthcare providers and to identify whether any of these elements differ by medical specialty or other factors.
References:
Gale, N. K., Heath, G., Cameron, E., Rashid, S., & Redwood, S. (2013). Using the framework method for the analysis of qualitative data in multi-disciplinary health research. BMC Medical Research Methodology, 13(1), 117.
Miles, M. B., & Huberman, A.M. (1994). Qualitative Data Analysis. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
BURDEN HOUR COMPUTATION (Number of responses (X) estimated response or participation time in minutes (/60) = annual burden hours):
Type/Category of Respondent |
No. of Respondents |
Participation Time (minutes) |
Burden (hours) |
Screening |
160 |
2 |
5.3 |
Focus Group |
80 |
90 |
120 |
TOTAL |
|
|
125.3 |
REQUESTED APPROVAL DATE: December 5, 2014
NAME OF PRA ANALYST & PROGRAM CONTACT:
Ila S. Mizrachi
Paperwork Reduction Act Staff
(301)796-3794
Brian Lappin
Office of Planning
(301)796-9126
FDA CENTER: Office of Planning (Office of the Commissioner)
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | OMBMemoMERCPtP |
Subject | MERC OMB MEP |
Author | Hillabrant |
Last Modified By | Mizrachi, Ila |
File Modified | 2014-11-21 |
File Created | 2014-11-20 |