One of my roles as a residency faculty member is to make sure that every resident completes a quality improvement (performance improvement) project by the time they graduate. Nearly all of these projects focus on getting clinicians to do more of something that improves health outcomes: lowering blood pressure, prescribing controller medications for asthma, controlling blood glucose and cholesterol levels in diabetes, providing guideline-consistent postpartum care. But quality improvement also includes doing less of things that don't improve (and may worsen) patients' health: vitamin D screening and supplementation, antireflux medications for healthy infants, cancer screening in older adults with limited life expectancies.
The American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation's Choosing Wisely campaign, which concluded in 2023 but remains active in many countries outside of the U.S., identified hundreds of "low value care" interventions, such as preventive care that is provided too soon or too often (e.g., screening colonoscopy). A 2020 paper reviewed more than 400 opportunities for stopping or scaling back unnecessary services in primary care and narrowed the field to 37 valid, high-priority recommendations. But identifying health care services to do less often or stop doing is the easy part; as "too much medicine" is often deeply embedded in systems, de-implementation is the real challenge.
A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials of primary care de-implementation strategies identified 140 studies that aimed to reduce antibiotic use (54%), other drug treatments (30%), imaging (12%), and/or laboratory testing (11%). The authors found moderate certainty evidence that provider education combined with audit and feedback reduced targeted low value care, while provider education, audit and feedback, and/or patient education alone had limited or no benefits. Interventions that incorporated multiple strategies were the most effective, reducing relative risks of low value care provision by 30% to 35% over a median of 287 days of follow-up.
Compared to the much larger research base on intensifying care - I suspect there are hundreds, if not thousands, of studies on lowering blood pressure alone - the foundation for de-implementing low value care clearly needs to be expanded and strengthened. But there's more than enough here for a motivated learner - say, a family medicine resident - to build on.

















