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Improving Rhode Island's Tuberculosis Preventive Services in Primary Care

K

Kent Hospital, Rhode Island

Status

Completed

Conditions

Latent Tuberculosis

Treatments

Other: TB Infection ECHO

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04188041
1370981-4
U54GM115677 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study explores primary care team members' knowledge, attitudinal, and skill gaps related to latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) testing and treatment. The gaps identified will inform the design of a survey and telementoring educational program (tuberculosis (TB) infection ECHO course). The EMR data query will further explore the reach of the expansion for community healthcare outcomes (ECHO) model. The hypothesis for this study is that the TB infection ECHO course will be feasible, will have a significant impact on primary care provider participants' learning and performance related to LTBI testing and treatment in their primary care practices, and will increase the number of LTBI tests and treatment prescribed in primary care.

Full description

This pilot study will use a mixed-methods design called an exploratory sequential translational research design. In this type of study design, the initial qualitative phase informs the design of an intervention (in this case a TB infection ECHO) and an instrument (in this case structured surveys) to study the intervention. The third phase implements the designed intervention and/or instrument to collect data and quantitatively assess the outcomes of interest (in this case feasibility and impact). The final aspect of the third phase explores an EMR data query to assess the reach of the intervention (providers' testing and treatment in the real world). In Aim 1, 25 primary care team members from our Brown Family Medicine, Care New England, and federally qualified health center networks will be purposively sampled to undergo key informant interviews regarding LTBI testing and treatment knowledge, attitudinal, and skill gaps. Questions will be asked to ascertain gaps throughout the entire latent TB infection care cascade. The results from Aim 1 will be used to design the survey instrument and the curriculum for an innovative, telementoring program (TB infection ECHO). In Aim 2, 12 primary care team members will be recruited to participate in a virtual six-month TB infection ECHO course. Participants will be asked to complete quantitative surveys before and after the course as well as post-session surveys following each session. Survey questions will assess feasibility measures related to process, resources, and management and impact measures related to learning and performance. Paired data from pre- and post-course surveys will be analyzed accordingly depending on the distribution of results. In Aim 3, data will be extracted from two ECHO participants' clinic sites before, during, and after ECHO implementation. Data will include information about LTBI testing and treatment to understand the reach and impact of the intervention of providers' testing and treatment behavior. This study will lead to an ECHO research framework that can be used for future ECHO courses that address other diseases in Rhode Island (RI).

Enrollment

84 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • > 18 years of age
  • Primary care team members in Rhode Island including doctors, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, or other healthcare providers who are involved in primary care.

Exclusion criteria

  • < 18 years of age
  • Primary care team members who do not primarily work in Rhode Island

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Sequential Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

84 participants in 3 patient groups

Qualitative
No Intervention group
Description:
Specific Aim 1: Explore the specific knowledge, attitudinal, and skills gaps to TB infection testing and treatment among primary care team members in RI through qualitative key informant interviews. In Aim 1, 25 primary care team members from the Brown Family Medicine and Care New England networks will be purposively sampled to undergo key informant interviews regarding TB infection testing and treatment knowledge, attitudinal, and skill gaps. Questions will be asked to ascertain gaps throughout the entire latent TB infection care cascade. The results from Aim 1 will be used to design the survey instrument and the curriculum for an innovative, telementoring program (TB infection ECHO).
Quantitative
Other group
Description:
Specific Aim 2: Design and evaluate an evidence-based telementoring intervention (ECHO model) that addresses the identified TB infection gaps in Aim 1, and evaluate this model for feasibility as well as its impact on primary care team member knowledge and TB infection testing and treatment in RI. 12 primary care team members will be recruited to participate in a virtual six-month TB infection ECHO course. Participants will be asked to complete quantitative surveys before and after the course as well as post-session surveys following each session. Survey questions will assess feasibility measures related to process, resources, and management and impact measures related to learning and performance. Paired data from pre- and post-course surveys will be analyzed accordingly depending on the distribution of results.
Treatment:
Other: TB Infection ECHO
Retrospective chart review
Other group
Description:
Pilot a retrospective electronic medical record (EMR) data review to examine RI primary care providers' testing and treatment before and after ECHO implementation and evaluate the model's reach. In Aim 3, data will be retrospectively extracted from two participants' clinics to research RI primary care providers' testing and treatment patterns before and after the ECHO course. The two clinics will be identified once Aim 2 is completed.
Treatment:
Other: TB Infection ECHO

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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