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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Apr 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Eval Clin Pract. 2011 Nov 29;19(2):230–234. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2753.2011.01801.x

Table 1.

Components of ‘actionable feedback’(11) included in examples of recent (2009–2010) studies employing performance feedback

Citation Topic Description of Intervention Population Outcome Direction Components of Actionable Feedback
Timely* Individualized Non-Punitive Customized
(13) Marijuana use Electronic personalized feedback (single time) College students No effect No Yes Yes No
(14) Alcohol consumption Electronic personalized feedback (single time) College athletes Modest positive No Yes Yes No
(15) Alcohol consumption Gender-specific normative feedback (single time) College students Modest positive No Yes Yes No
(16) Alcohol consumption Personalized, face-to-face vs computerized feedback College heavy drinkers Positive No Yes Yes No
(17) Antibiotic prescribing Written feedback (single time) compared with written and verbal feedback General practitioners Positive for written, no added value of verbal No No (group) Yes No
(18) Antibiotic prescribing Written feedback from infectious disease specialist Internal medicine physicians Positive Yes Yes Yes No
(19) Prophylactic antibiotic prescribing Several forms of feedback Surgeons Positive for real-time guidance and reminders Yes Yes Yes No
(20) Diabetes care Written group feedback Primary care physicians Modest positive No No (group) Yes No
(21) Antipsychotic prescribing in schizophrenia Aggregated verbal and written reports to groups Outpatient mental health services facilities Positive No No (group) Yes No
(22) Emotional reactivity and psychological symptoms Verbal feedback Young adults diagnosed with maladaptive perfectionism Positive No Yes Yes No
*

Defined as monthly or more and/or in ‘real time’