AI Article Synopsis

  • Population health initiatives often depend on outreach to address gaps in preventive care, facing challenges in customizing messages for diverse patient groups.
  • Traditional A/B testing requires large sample sizes to effectively test different messaging, making it less viable for targeted outreach.
  • The study found that using Sequential Multiple Assignment Randomized Trials (SMART) is more cost-effective and beneficial for developing personalized communications compared to A/B testing, especially when focusing on more homogeneous groups later in the process.

Article Abstract

Population health initiatives often rely on cold outreach to close gaps in preventive care, such as overdue screenings or immunizations. Tailoring messages to diverse patient populations remains challenging, as traditional A/B testing requires large sample sizes to test only two alternative messages. With increasing availability of large language models (LLMs), programs can utilize tiered testing among both LLM and manual human agents, presenting the dilemma of identifying which patients need different levels of human support to cost-effectively engage large populations. Using microsimulations, we compared both the statistical power and false positive rates of A/B testing and Sequential Multiple Assignment Randomized Trials (SMART) for developing personalized communications across multiple effect sizes and sample sizes. SMART showed better cost-effectiveness and net benefit across all scenarios, but superior power for detecting heterogeneous treatment effects (HTEs) only in later randomization stages, when populations were more homogeneous and subtle differences drove engagement differences.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11574204PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41746-024-01330-2DOI Listing

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