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Under 50% of patients diagnosed with hypertension and treated in general practice, have reached a blood pressure within the recommended levels of the national guideline. Compliance is the main problem for these patients, but effective tools for increasing patient compliance are missing. The objective is to evaluate the risk-assessment and risk-communication tool: "Your Heart Forecast", to see if it can improve patient compliance, health literacy and empowerment.
Patients will be followed in a cluster-randomised controlled trial in the setting of general practice, using surveys at inclusion and after 6 and 12 months. Besides surveys, the participants' blood pressure will be measured as a hard outcome and data will be drawn from various patient databases. After 6 months, qualitative interviews will be conducted, with a subgroup of patients from the intervention group.
It is expected to find whether the use of Your Heart Forecast can lower patients' blood pressure and/or increase their compliance, health literacy and empowerment. The aim is to show if an increase in general health literacy and patient empowerment, as measured by Patient Activation Measure(PAM13) can be seen.
The investigators hope to reveal whether this software can improve patient compliance and thereby be a reasonable tool to implement in the national blood pressure control program. In further studies, it should be shown if the cost of using this program is far less than expenses for hospitalisation due to complications and comorbidity to hypertension.
Full description
The project description has been shortened to fit the format of clinicaltrials.gov.
Background:
To improve communication of risk messages, they must be communicated in a way that is understandable and relevant to the patient. Every individual is different and therefore communication tools must be personalised and easy to understand. This is important as low health literacy is present among close to half of the European population and is associated with poor health outcomes, low self-management and underestimation of personal Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) risk. Since the risk of CVD is the product of a complex combination of multiple individual risk factors, there is a need for communicating complex information in an easily understandable way. Several tools for calculating and communicating CVD risk have been developed, but rigorous testing of their communicative effects is lacking.
Inadequately controlled blood pressure is associated with an increased risk of CVD, and more frequent contacts with GPs. Intention to change behaviour is related to the patients' perception of risk. Consequently, better ways for GPs to communicate CVD risks and motivate patients for risk-reducing strategies are warranted. Efficient communication requires information to be presented in formats that encourage decision-makers, i.e. patients, to automatically extract specific meanings or overall messages. Use of graphical illustrations with distinct features has previously been shown to be an effective and user-friendly tool to communicate risk, especially to people with limited health literacy. A visual decision aid could be a way to improve the blood pressure consultations and to assure that GPs are supported to provide patients with the relevant information. It is suggested that using a decision aid will also systematise the consultation and make it more reproducible.
The present study will use the internet-based risk communication tool Your Heart Forecast (YHF) to evaluate, whether it can influence patients' understanding of risk and treatment adherence. This will be done paying special attention to patients' blood pressure, lipid levels, empowerment and health literacy. The rationale behind the tool is to help improve patient-doctor interaction and communication so that the patient can gain an improved understanding of his/her CVD risk, and the modifiability of risk. Patients with hypertension have been chosen as a case study since high blood pressure is one of the main modifiable risk factors for CVD, as opposed to i.e. age, gender, ethnicity and family history.
YHF is a risk-communication tool, which communicates CVD risks as personalised, interactive and dynamic visual graphs. Following input from personal health-related data, the GP can, by using YHF, interactively guide the patient through:
Aim:
The aim is to evaluate the effect of using the YHF visual communication tool on changes in blood pressure and adherence to CVD preventive medications. Further, by means of questionnaires, it is the aim to study whether changes in health-literacy, adherence, patient empowerment and risk communication are associated with changes in blood pressure, lipid levels and/or lifestyle choices. By means of qualitative interviews, it will be investigated whether the use of the program heightens motivation, increases awareness of risk or creates unwarranted effects like causing the patients to be anxious.
Primary research question:
• Will the introduction of YHF during an annual blood pressure control consultation lead to improved general health literacy, improved medication adherence and empowerment after 12 months?
Secondary research questions:
Methods
Trial design:
This study will use a mixed methods approach with a combination of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) and qualitative semi-structured interviews. The protocol has been developed using the SPIRIT checklist as a guideline.
Two pilot practices will be enrolled as if they were intervention practices. In these 2 practices, patients will be assessed 3-6 months before the project practices. A subgroup Q, of 5-15 patients from the pilot group, will be selected for qualitative interviews.
GPs in the control group, will not be introduced to YHF and will follow their patients in the blood pressure control program as usual.
Study population Participants All general practices in the Region of Southern Denmark will be invited to join the study. 30 GPs of those willing to participate, will, with due respect for geographical location and practice type, be representatively selected for participation.
Both incident and prevalent hypertensive patients will be included within an inclusion period of 6-12 months.
Sample size Sample size calculation is based on blood pressure as the primary outcome. For a two-sample pooled t-test of a normal mean difference with a two-sided significance level of 0.05, a sample size of 120 participants per group is required. This is to obtain a power of at least 90%, to detect a difference of 5 mmHg between the means at baseline and after 1 year. To adjust for expected drop-outs, 30 participants will be added per group and at least 300 patients will be enrolled in the trial. To account for cluster-effects when randomising on practice-level, the sample size will be further increased by 10-15% to reach 340 patients. More participants will be needed for subgroup analyses on sociodemographic and therefore, the aim is to reach a total of 600 participating patients. The pilot practices will provide information regarding the prevalence of patients with inadequately controlled blood pressure willing to participate, as well as more specific knowledge on the needed number of practices included, making the final sample size calculation uncertain at this point.
Randomisation Participating GPs will be randomly divided into two groups A and B, using the randomisation tool built into REDCap.
Participants will be given unique Trial Participant Numbers (TPNs). TPNs will be generated by PREDICT (the software behind Your Heart Forecast) when patients are included and will be given consecutively starting from 0001. The number will be given a prefix A or B depending on which group (intervention or control) the participant's general practice belongs to. Subgroup Q will be 5-15 participants chosen deliberately from the pilot group, to ensure it represents the intervention group for use in the qualitative interviews.
Practical procedure General practices will be actively involved in the RCT as follows. After identifying the list of patients from the statistics module, the practice will review the patients with regards to the inclusion/exclusion criteria. After reviewing, an invitational letter will be sent out to the first 25 of the remaining patients on the list. The invited patients can then opt out or show up at the appointment and receive the oral and written trial participant information. Patients will not need to go to the practice more times than usual, but the practice will need to use extra time to give trial information. The practice will be compensated for this extra time used.
The day after the inclusion, the participant will receive an email with a link to a questionnaire, which must be completed before the subsequent appointment with the GP. The first page of the questionnaire will be the informed consent form.
With the large number of patients with known hypertension and the compressed method of inclusion, it is expected that GPs will have enough use of the program Your Heart Forecast, to maintain the skills and knowledge to use the program, which they will be taught by the research group before inclusion.
The RCT will consist of a 12-month intervention period, except for participants in subgroup Q who will be interviewed 6 months after enrolment (t6) and subsequently excluded.
The intervention group will receive an educational e-mail, which also includes a reminder of the project and YHF, every 2 weeks. The e-mails' health educational content will reflect available information from the Danish Heart Association's web page (www.hjerteforeningen.dk).
Data:
The questionnaire (q1) will include questions to evaluate socioeconomic and sociodemographic variables, baseline health literacy, risk perception and self-efficacy (PAM-13), smoking status, comorbidity and medication.
The second patient questionnaire (q2) is very short and will focus on whether the patient was surprised about the risk score, if any changes in the medication were made and how the general experience of the YHF was.
Data regarding number and content of contacts to the GP will be obtained from the patient´s medical records and the affiliated accounting system including prescription databases for estimating compliance. All telephone-, email-, clinic- and home consultations are registered. Contacts from three years prior to the intervention and up until two years after, will be obtained.
Patients in the intervention group will receive their personal profile in the YHF to make it possible for them to access and use the program at home in between the blood pressure consultations at their GP. All data entered in YHF will be stored in accordance with Danish law by the software provider, with whom a data management agreement has been made.
Base-line measurements will be used to identify subgroups of participants. Qualitative data will be obtained via semi-structured interviews, transcribed and analysed with systematic text condensation. The qualitative interviews will seek to shed light on possible explanations for the hypothesized effects on self-management, lifestyle choices, blood pressure and contacts to the GP.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
If the patient during the trial, no longer fulfils inclusion criteria 1 and/or 2, they are excluded from the trial.
If the patient during the trial develops prolonged illness so severe that treatment of hypertension is no longer a priority, he/she will be excluded.
Patients with blood pressure above 170/100 are excluded, as these patients should receive intensive blood pressure treatment regardless of their predicted CVD risk or heart age.
Pregnancy.
Very high cholesterol (TCL or TCL/HDL 8 or over).
Genetic lipid disorders.
If the patient is diabetic AND has a complicating kidney disease.
Known problems with arteries to the legs defined as:
Prior stroke or mini-stroke (TIA).
Angina, prior AMI or heart related operation.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
600 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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