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About
In 2023, Cleveland Clinic was accepted into a national program, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute Health Systems Implementation Initiative (PCORI HSII) which aims to improve implementation of prior published PCORI-funded research evidence into real-world practice. The investigators first received funding to build organizational capacity to participate in health system implementation projects. This protocol describes activities for our first implementation project for which the investigators have received funding from the PCORI HSII program.
The investigator's project seeks to expand the availability of shared medical appointments (SMAs) for obesity treatment in all 56 primary care practices of the Cleveland Clinic health system in Northeast Ohio. The proposed project, to be implemented as part of routine healthcare delivery, will adapt aspects of a prior study funded by the PCORI that generated evidence that group visits such as SMAs can help with obesity treatment. All primary care patients in Northeast Ohio with obesity (body mass index (BMI) >/=30) and aged between 20 and 75 years will be potentially eligible for enrollment in the SMAs. Primary care providers will offer patients entry into the SMAs as part of usual clinical care during office visits. In addition, information about these SMAs will also be available to the patients through the "MyChart" patient portal in EPIC. Implementation of the SMAs will happen in three phases (pre-implementation, active implementation, and maintenance) over 42 months. During its implementation, the project intends to reach over 140,000 patients. Quantitative and qualitative methods will be used to evaluate implementation and effectiveness outcomes associated with the SMAs. Electronic medical records and patient surveys will be the key data sources for the quantitative evaluation. Qualitative data collection methods will include semi-structured interviews, field observations, and periodic reflections.
As this implementation project will be part of routine care delivery, the investigators emphasize that the risks (physical, psychological, social, legal, financial, or other) associated with participation in SMAs for obesity will not be greater than minimal or those posed by any SMAs as currently configured for the delivery of other healthcare services within the Cleveland Clinic healthcare system. The potential benefits associated with participation in these SMAs include weight loss, improvements in cardiovascular risk factors, and reduced utilization of acute healthcare services.
Full description
The objective of this implementation effort is to optimize the availability of intensive lifestyle treatment of obesity in the adult population of patients who receive care within the Cleveland Clinic health system in Northeast Ohio primary care practices as part of routine clinical practice. Utilizing the group visit model from the evidence generated from the Befort et al Patient-Centered Outcomes Research (PCORI) funded study,(5) the investigators will significantly expand current health system obesity treatment resources and build on our model of SMAs led by multidisciplinary teams to deliver the intervention. Through a coordinated health system-wide implementation effort in all primary care practices, the investigators aim to improve the health of our patients with obesity through developing a successful obesity treatment program, improving upon current health system programs, with the goal of long-term impact in reducing patient comorbidities, cardiovascular risk, and promoting sustainable weight loss. The investigators propose to implement group visits for intensive lifestyle intervention for obesity utilizing the SMA model. Implementation of the Obesity SMAs will be in all 56 Cleveland Clinic primary care practices in Northeast Ohio.
Specific Aims
Aim 1. To prepare for implementation of Obesity Treatment SMAs across all Northeast Ohio Primary Care Practices (Pre-Implementation)
Pre-Implementation Phase (9 months)
Aim 2. To Implement Obesity Treatment SMAs across all Northeast Ohio Primary Care Practices (Active Implementation)
Active Implementation Phase (18 months)
Aim 3: To monitor and evaluate the maintenance of the Obesity Treatment SMAs across all Northeast Ohio Primary Care Practices (Maintenance & Sustainment)
Maintenance & Sustainment Phase (15 months)
Study Population (Potential Eligible / Intended Reach) Potentially eligible patients: Utilizing electronic medical record data, the investigators determined across the 56 outpatient primary care practices, the total patient population ages 20-75 with a body mass index (BMI) >/= 30 who have had a primary care visit within the past 18 months is 170,087 patients.
Intended reach: The intended reach will exclude patients with a history of bariatric surgery, current pregnancy, current cancer diagnosis or cognitive impairment diagnosis. Exclusion criteria are based upon unique clinical situations affecting BMI as well as conditions that may affect SMA participation. Prior obesity SMA participation will not be an exclusion. The intended reach includes 141,735 potentially eligible patients ages 20 to 75, with an office visit within 18 months, BMI >/=30, with exclusion of history of bariatric surgery, pregnancy, current cancer diagnosis or cognitive impairment diagnosis. Through navigator support, the investigators will assess demographic distribution of patients with uptake of the program and will ensure representation from groups with higher Area Deprivation Index (ADI). If this is not the case, the investigators will conduct outreach to eligible patients outside of an office visit, through the MyChart portal or telephone outreach. Scripts will be created as part of routine clinical care during the pre-implementation phase.
Entry Into SMAs Entry into the obesity treatment program will be offered by a patient's primary care provider as part of usual clinical care and can be offered at the time of an office visit. In addition, the clinical and project teams will create flyers describing the program to be available to primary care practices. This information will also be available through our MyChart patient portal in the EPIC(6) electronic medical record. Scripts will be created as part of routine clinical care during the pre-implementation phase.
Once the referral to the program is made, the patient will complete an individual appointment, offered as both in-person or virtual, with either an obesity-trained primary care provider, an endocrinology provider, or a Wellness Medicine provider from the Primary Care Institute. This individual appointment will be focused on discussion of the diagnosis of obesity and treatment options, including the SMA program. If the patient accepts the referral to the SMA, the first appointment will be scheduled. The program will include options of scheduling both the initial individual appointment and the SMA through the primary care practice office or an opportunity for self-scheduling through our MyChart patient portal. Throughout the study, the investigators will have primary care navigator support to ensure outreach to underrepresented groups.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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