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Evidence-Based Intervention Guidelines
Overview
This reference provides comprehensive guidance on selecting, implementing, and documenting evidence-based interventions across pharmacological, non-pharmacological, and procedural treatment modalities. These guidelines support treatment plan development with current best practices and clinical recommendations.
Evidence Hierarchy
Levels of Evidence
Level I: Highest Quality
- Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials (RCTs)
- Large multi-center RCTs
Level II: High Quality
- Individual RCTs
- Systematic reviews of observational studies
Level III: Moderate Quality
- Cohort studies
- Case-control studies
- Well-designed observational studies
Level IV: Lower Quality
- Case series
- Case reports
- Expert opinion
Recommendation Strength:
- Grade A: Strong recommendation, high-quality evidence
- Grade B: Moderate recommendation, moderate-quality evidence
- Grade C: Weak recommendation, low-quality evidence
- Grade D: Recommendation against (evidence of harm or no benefit)
Pharmacological Interventions
Medication Selection Principles
1. Evidence-Based Prescribing
- Use medications with proven efficacy for indication
- Follow clinical practice guidelines
- Consider comparative effectiveness data
- Prefer medications with better safety profiles when equivalent efficacy
2. Patient-Specific Factors
- Comorbidities and contraindications
- Organ function (renal, hepatic)
- Drug allergies and intolerances
- Concurrent medications (drug interactions)
- Age, pregnancy status
- Genetic factors (pharmacogenomics when available)
- Cost and insurance coverage
3. Medication Safety
- Start low, go slow (especially in elderly, multiple comorbidities)
- Titrate to target dose based on response and tolerance
- Monitor for adverse effects
- Avoid potentially inappropriate medications (Beers Criteria for elderly)
- Polypharmacy reduction when possible
Common Medication Classes by Indication
Hypertension
First-Line Agents (per JNC-8, ACC/AHA guidelines):
- ACE Inhibitors (lisinopril, enalapril): Preferred if diabetes, CKD, or heart failure
- ARBs (losartan, valsartan): Alternative to ACE if intolerant
- Calcium Channel Blockers (amlodipine): Particularly effective in elderly, Black patients
- Thiazide Diuretics (chlorthalidone, HCTZ): Cost-effective, good CV outcomes
Dosing Strategy:
- Start single agent at low dose
- Titrate to maximum tolerated dose before adding second agent
- Combination therapy often needed (2-3 agents)
- Monitor BP response, adjust every 2-4 weeks
Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
First-Line (ADA Standards of Care):
- Metformin: First-line for all patients unless contraindicated (eGFR <30)
- Start 500-850mg daily or BID, titrate to 2000mg total daily
Second-Line (individualize based on comorbidities):
- SGLT2 Inhibitors (empagliflozin, dapagliflozin): If heart failure or CKD (strong cardio-renal benefits)
- GLP-1 Receptor Agonists (semaglutide, dulaglutide): If ASCVD or high risk, weight loss needed
- DPP-4 Inhibitors (sitagliptin): If low hypoglycemia risk desired
- Sulfonylureas (glipizide): Cost-effective but hypoglycemia risk
- Insulin: If HbA1c very elevated ($>$10%) or symptoms of hyperglycemia
Depression
First-Line SSRIs (APA guidelines):
- Sertraline, escitalopram, fluoxetine, citalopram, paroxetine
- Start low (e.g., sertraline 50mg, escitalopram 10mg)
- Titrate after 2-4 weeks if partial response
- Full trial: 6-8 weeks at therapeutic dose
- Continue 6-12 months after remission (longer if recurrent)
Second-Line:
- SNRIs (venlafaxine, duloxetine): Especially if chronic pain comorbidity
- Bupropion: If sexual dysfunction concern, smoking cessation
- Mirtazapine: If insomnia/appetite stimulation needed
Augmentation (if partial response):
- Second antidepressant from different class
- Atypical antipsychotic (aripiprazole, quetiapine) - FDA-approved augmentation
- Lithium, thyroid hormone (triiodothyronine)
Chronic Pain
Multimodal Analgesia (WHO Pain Ladder, CDC Opioid Guidelines):
Non-Opioid Analgesics:
- Acetaminophen: 3-4g/day divided, safe if liver function normal
- NSAIDs: Ibuprofen, naproxen, meloxicam - short-term or chronic with GI protection
- Monitor: Renal function, BP, GI bleeding risk
Adjuvant Analgesics for Neuropathic Pain:
- Gabapentin: 300mg titrated to 1800-3600mg/day divided TID
- Pregabalin: 75mg BID titrated to 150-300mg BID (better bioavailability than gabapentin)
- SNRIs (duloxetine): 60mg daily for diabetic neuropathy, chronic MSK pain
- TCAs (amitriptyline, nortriptyline): Low-dose (10-75mg QHS) - second-line due to side effects
Topical Agents:
- Lidocaine patches 5%, diclofenac gel, capsaicin cream
- Local effect, minimal systemic absorption
Opioids (CDC guidelines - use cautiously):
- Only after non-opioid multimodal therapies inadequate
- Lowest effective dose, short-acting preferred initially
- Avoid $>$90 MME/day if possible
- UDS, PDMP monitoring, naloxone co-prescription
- Reassess frequently, taper if not meeting functional goals
Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction (HFrEF)
Guideline-Directed Medical Therapy (GDMT) - "Foundational Four":
-
ACE Inhibitor or ARB or ARNI
- ACE: Lisinopril 20-40mg daily, enalapril 10-20mg BID
- ARNI (Sacubitril/Valsartan): 24/26mg BID → 97/103mg BID (superior to ACE/ARB)
- Monitor: BP, renal function, potassium
-
Beta-Blocker
- Carvedilol 3.125-6.25mg BID → 25mg BID (target)
- Metoprolol succinate 12.5-25mg daily → 200mg daily
- Bisoprolol 1.25mg → 10mg daily
- Titrate slowly, monitor HR, BP
-
Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonist (MRA)
- Spironolactone 12.5-25mg daily (up to 50mg)
- Eplerenone 25mg daily → 50mg daily
- Monitor: Potassium, renal function (risk hyperkalemia)
-
SGLT2 Inhibitor
- Dapagliflozin 10mg daily or empagliflozin 10mg daily
- Reduces HF hospitalizations and mortality
- Also beneficial for diabetes and CKD
Additional Therapies:
- Loop diuretic (furosemide) for volume management (not mortality benefit)
- Hydralazine-isosorbide dinitrate (if African American or intolerant to ACE/ARB)
- Ivabradine (if EF $\leq$35%, HR $>$70 on max beta-blocker)
- Digoxin (symptomatic benefit, reduce hospitalizations)
Medication Documentation Best Practices
Include in Treatment Plan:
- Generic name (brand name optional)
- Dose, route, frequency
- Indication/rationale
- Titration plan if applicable
- Expected timeline for benefit
- Key side effects to monitor
- Drug interactions
- When to adjust or discontinue
Example: "Lisinopril 10mg PO daily - ACE inhibitor for hypertension and renal protection in diabetes. Titrate to 20mg in 2-4 weeks if BP not at goal and tolerating (monitor for cough, hyperkalemia). Target BP <130/80."
Non-Pharmacological Interventions
Lifestyle Modifications
Diet and Nutrition
Mediterranean Diet (Evidence: multiple RCTs, PREDIMED trial):
- Indications: Cardiovascular disease prevention, diabetes management
- Components:
- High intake: Fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, nuts, olive oil
- Moderate: Fish, poultry
- Low: Red meat, sweets
- Evidence: Reduces cardiovascular events by 30%, improves glucose control
- Implementation: Dietitian referral for medical nutrition therapy
DASH Diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension):
- Indication: Hypertension
- Components: High fruits/vegetables, low-fat dairy, reduced sodium (<2300mg, ideally <1500mg)
- Evidence: Reduces SBP by 8-14 mmHg
- Implementation: DASH eating plan education, sodium tracking
Carbohydrate Counting (for Diabetes):
- Consistent carbohydrate intake: 45-60g per meal
- Enables insulin dosing adjustment
- Prevents glycemic variability
- Dietitian teaches carb counting skills
Weight Management:
- Caloric deficit: 500-750 kcal/day for 1-2 lb/week weight loss
- Behavior change strategies: Self-monitoring, stimulus control, goal-setting
- Structured programs (Weight Watchers, MOVE!, etc.) more effective than self-directed
- Pharmacotherapy (GLP-1 agonists, orlistat) or bariatric surgery for BMI $\geq$30-35 with comorbidities
Physical Activity and Exercise
Aerobic Exercise:
- Recommendation: 150 min/week moderate intensity OR 75 min/week vigorous
- Moderate: Brisk walking, cycling, swimming - can talk but not sing
- Vigorous: Running, fast cycling - can say few words before pause
- Benefits: Cardiovascular health, glucose control, weight management, mood
- Implementation: Start with 10 min sessions, gradually increase
Resistance Training:
- Recommendation: 2-3 sessions/week, all major muscle groups
- Benefits: Muscle strength, bone density, metabolic rate, glucose control
- Implementation: Bodyweight exercises, resistance bands, free weights, machines
Balance and Flexibility:
- Important for fall prevention in elderly
- Yoga, tai chi
- Stretching routines
Exercise Prescription:
- FITT principle: Frequency, Intensity, Time, Type
- Individualize based on fitness level, comorbidities, goals
- Cardiac clearance if indicated (using ACSM or ACC/AHA guidelines)
Example: "Aerobic exercise: Walk 30 minutes, 5 days/week at moderate intensity (target HR 50-70% max). Resistance training: Upper and lower body exercises 2x/week, 2 sets of 10-12 reps."
Smoking Cessation
Evidence: Strongest intervention for COPD, cardiovascular disease, cancer prevention
5 A's Approach:
- Ask: Screen all patients for tobacco use
- Advise: Urge all tobacco users to quit
- Assess: Willingness to make quit attempt
- Assist: Aid in quitting (counseling + medication)
- Arrange: Follow-up contact
Pharmacotherapy (doubles quit rates):
- Nicotine Replacement: Patch, gum, lozenge - OTC, safe
- Varenicline: Most effective (Chantix), start 1 week before quit date
- Bupropion: Alternative, also treats depression
- Combination: NRT + varenicline/bupropion more effective
Counseling:
- Quitline: 1-800-QUIT-NOW
- Individual or group counseling
- Cognitive-behavioral techniques
Implementation: Set quit date within 30 days, prescribe pharmacotherapy + counseling referral, follow up within 1 week of quit date.
Sleep Hygiene
Indications: Insomnia, poor sleep quality
Components:
- Consistent sleep-wake schedule (same bedtime/wake time)
- Bedroom: Dark, quiet, cool (60-67°F)
- Avoid: Caffeine after 2 PM, alcohol, large meals before bed
- Screen time: Stop 1 hour before bed
- Wind-down routine: Reading, bath, relaxation
- Use bed only for sleep (not TV, work)
- If can't sleep after 20 min, get up and do quiet activity
Evidence: Effective for chronic insomnia, often combined with CBT for insomnia (CBT-I)
Stress Management
Techniques:
- Mindfulness meditation: 10-20 min daily, reduces anxiety, depression
- Progressive muscle relaxation: Systematic tensing and relaxing muscle groups
- Deep breathing: Diaphragmatic breathing, 4-7-8 technique
- Yoga, tai chi: Mind-body practices
- Cognitive restructuring: Challenge stress-inducing thoughts
Evidence: Reduces stress hormones, improves mood, pain perception
Behavioral Interventions
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Indications: Depression, anxiety, insomnia, chronic pain, substance use
Core Components:
- Psychoeducation
- Cognitive restructuring (identify and challenge distorted thoughts)
- Behavioral activation (increase rewarding activities)
- Problem-solving skills
- Relapse prevention
Evidence: Equivalent to antidepressants for mild-moderate depression, first-line for anxiety, insomnia
Implementation: 12-16 weekly 50-min sessions with trained therapist, homework between sessions
Variants:
- CBT-I (insomnia): Sleep restriction, stimulus control, cognitive therapy for sleep
- CBT-CP (chronic pain): Pain education, activity pacing, cognitive restructuring of pain catastrophizing
Motivational Interviewing (MI)
Indication: Ambivalence about behavior change (diet, exercise, substance use, medication adherence)
Principles:
- Express empathy
- Develop discrepancy (between current behavior and goals/values)
- Roll with resistance (don't argue)
- Support self-efficacy
Techniques:
- Open-ended questions
- Affirmations
- Reflective listening
- Summarizing
- Elicit "change talk"
Evidence: Effective for initiating behavior change in multiple domains
Patient Education and Self-Management
Components:
- Disease education (pathophysiology, natural history, treatment)
- Self-monitoring skills (blood glucose, BP, weight, symptoms)
- Medication management (purpose, dosing, side effects)
- Symptom recognition and action plans
- Lifestyle modification skills
- Problem-solving
- When to seek care
Evidence: Self-management education improves outcomes in diabetes, asthma, heart failure, chronic pain
Delivery:
- Individual education by clinician or educator
- Structured programs (DSMES for diabetes, cardiac rehab for heart disease)
- Group classes
- Written materials, videos, apps
Procedural and Interventional Therapies
Rehabilitation Therapies
Physical Therapy
Indications: Musculoskeletal injuries, post-surgical rehabilitation, balance/gait disorders, chronic pain
Interventions:
- Therapeutic exercise: Strengthening, stretching, endurance
- Manual therapy: Soft tissue mobilization, joint mobilization
- Gait and balance training
- Modalities: Heat, ice, ultrasound, electrical stimulation, TENS
- Functional training: ADL retraining, body mechanics
Evidence: Strong evidence for specific conditions (e.g., PT for knee OA reduces pain and improves function equivalent to NSAIDs)
Prescription: Frequency (e.g., 2-3x/week), duration (e.g., 4-8 weeks), specific interventions/goals
Occupational Therapy
Indications: ADL limitations, upper extremity dysfunction, cognitive-perceptual deficits, work-related injuries
Interventions:
- ADL/IADL training
- Adaptive equipment and environmental modifications
- Upper extremity strengthening and coordination
- Energy conservation techniques
- Cognitive rehabilitation
- Work hardening/conditioning
Evidence: Improves independence post-stroke, post-injury, with chronic conditions
Speech-Language Pathology
Indications: Dysphagia, aphasia, dysarthria, cognitive-communication disorders
Interventions:
- Swallow therapy and diet modifications
- Language therapy (aphasia)
- Articulation therapy
- Cognitive-linguistic therapy
- Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC)
Interventional Pain Procedures
Epidural Steroid Injections (ESI)
Indication: Radicular pain from disc herniation or spinal stenosis
Evidence: Moderate-quality evidence for short-term pain relief (3-6 weeks to 3 months), variable long-term benefit
Approach: Fluoroscopy-guided, transforaminal, interlaminar, or caudal
Frequency: Up to 3-4 injections per year
Risks: Infection, bleeding, nerve injury (rare), dural puncture
Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA)
Indication: Facet joint-mediated pain (after positive diagnostic medial branch blocks)
Evidence: Good evidence for lumbar facet pain relief for 6-12 months
Procedure: Thermal lesioning of medial branch nerves supplying facet joints
Repeatable: Can repeat when pain returns
Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS)
Indication: Refractory chronic neuropathic pain (failed back surgery syndrome, CRPS, diabetic neuropathy)
Evidence: 50-60% achieve $\geq$50% pain relief, improves function
Procedure: Trial lead placement (5-7 days), if successful → permanent implant
Technologies: Traditional, high-frequency, burst stimulation, dorsal root ganglion (DRG)
Surgical Interventions
When to Refer for Surgery:
- Failed conservative management (adequate trial - typically 6-12 weeks minimum)
- Progressive neurologic deficit
- Cauda equina syndrome (emergency)
- Severe functional limitation affecting quality of life
- Structural pathology amenable to surgical correction
- Patient preference after risks/benefits discussion
Shared Decision-Making: Discuss operative vs. non-operative management, risks, benefits, expected outcomes, recovery
Integrative and Complementary Therapies
Acupuncture
Evidence:
- Moderate evidence for chronic low back pain, osteoarthritis knee pain, tension headaches, migraine
- Mechanism: Unclear (endorphin release, gate control theory, placebo)
Implementation: 8-12 sessions by licensed acupuncturist
Massage Therapy
Evidence: Modest benefit for chronic low back pain, anxiety, cancer-related symptoms
Types: Swedish, deep tissue, myofascial release
Implementation: 1-2x/week, 30-60 min sessions
Yoga
Evidence: Improves back pain, balance, flexibility, reduces stress and anxiety
Types: Hatha (gentle), Vinyasa (flowing), Iyengar (alignment-focused)
Implementation: Group classes or home practice, 2-3x/week
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR)
Evidence: Reduces stress, anxiety, depression, chronic pain
Program: 8-week structured program, weekly 2.5-hour sessions, daily home practice
Components: Meditation, body scan, mindful movement (yoga)
Chiropractic Care
Evidence: Effective for acute and chronic low back pain, neck pain
Techniques: Spinal manipulation, mobilization, soft tissue therapy
Safety: Generally safe, avoid high-velocity manipulation if osteoporosis, spinal instability
Intervention Selection and Documentation
Treatment Algorithm Approach
- Diagnosis-Specific: Follow evidence-based guidelines for condition
- Severity-Appropriate: Mild → conservative; severe → aggressive
- Stepwise Intensification: Start with first-line, add or switch if inadequate response
- Multimodal: Combine complementary interventions (pharmacologic + non-pharmacologic)
- Individualized: Adjust for patient factors (comorbidities, preferences, resources)
Documentation Template
For each intervention, document:
- Intervention: Specific name/type
- Indication: Why this intervention for this patient
- Evidence: Guideline-based, RCT data supporting use
- Dose/Frequency/Duration: Specific parameters
- Expected Benefit: What should improve, by how much, when
- Monitoring: How will response be assessed
- Risks/Side Effects: Key concerns to monitor
- Alternatives Considered: What else was considered, why not chosen
Document Version: 1.0
Last Updated: January 2025
Next Review: January 2026