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Practice Facilitation to Scale up a CDS for Hypertension Management

N

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hypertension

Treatments

Other: CDS Alone
Other: CDS plus practice facilitation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Hypertension (HTN) is the most prevalent modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease among U.S. adults. Despite a long history of established guidelines to support clinical management, only half of U.S. adults diagnosed with HTN have poorly controlled blood pressure (BP) and medication adherence to proven effective treatment remains suboptimal. Clinical decision support (CDS) has the potential to overcome barriers to delivering guideline-recommended care and improve HTN management. Practice facilitation is a well-demonstrated implementation strategy to support process changes and has the potential to facilitate CDS implementation. Our objective is to rigorously evaluate whether practice facilitation provided in concert with a HTN-focused CDS that incorporates medication adherence results is an effective strategy for scaling and implementing CDS. The investigators will update an existing CDS to incorporate alerts and tools to address medication adherence then randomize 40 small independent primary care practices in New York City to receive either practice facilitation in addition to the CDS or the CDS alone. After a twelve-month intervention period, The investigators will examine the differences in blood pressure control achieved by practices in the CDS plus practice facilitation group versus practices that received the CDS alone

Full description

Hypertension (HTN) is the most prevalent modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease among U.S. adults. Despite a long history of established guidelines to support clinical management, only half of U.S. adults diagnosed with HTN have poorly controlled blood pressure (BP) and medication adherence to proven effective treatment remains suboptimal. Clinical decision support (CDS) has the potential to overcome barriers to delivering guideline-recommended care and improve HTN management. However, optimal strategies for scaling CDS have not been well established, particularly in small independent primary care practices which often lack the resources to effectively change practice routines in order to effectively utilize CDS. Further, CDS is used in relatively few components of the medication management process, despite indications that CDS alerts are likely to impact patient care. Practice facilitation is a well-demonstrated implementation strategy to support process changes and has the potential to facilitate CDS implementation. Our objective is to rigorously evaluate whether practice facilitation provided in concert with a HTN-focused CDS that incorporates medication adherence results is an effective strategy for scaling and implementing CDS. The investigators will initially update and incorporate an evidence-based hypertension-focused CDS shown to be effective in Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) into an existing commercial electronic health record (EHR) system used by a large network of independent primary care practices. This CDS will employ several features shown to be effective in the FQHCs, including passive alerts, order sets, documentation templates, standardized medication adherence questionnaires, and clinical reminders. Additionally, the CDS will incorporate a new feature, a medication adherence alert based on prescription claims data. The investigators will then randomize 40 small independent primary care practices in New York City to receive either practice facilitation in addition to the CDS or the CDS alone. The PF intervention will include an initial training in the CDS and review of current guidelines along with follow-up in-person and remote meetings for coaching and supporting integration into the workflow. After a twelve-month intervention period, The investigators will examine the differences in blood pressure control achieved by practices in the CDS plus practice facilitation group versus practices that received the CDS alone. The investigators will also assess the implementation process for scaling the CDS using the RE-AIM framework. The results of this study will inform future efforts to implement and scale CDS into small primary care practices, where much of care delivery occurs in the U.S.

Enrollment

37 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18-85 years old
  • an outpatient clinic visit with an HTN diagnosis based on the ICD-10 code in the prior 12 months
  • must have received care at the clinic for at least 12 months

Exclusion criteria

  • not pregnant
  • not have end-stage kidney disease as defined by an ICD-10 code for dialysis or transplantation

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

37 participants in 2 patient groups

CDS alone
Active Comparator group
Description:
This arm will only receive the CDS.
Treatment:
Other: CDS Alone
CDS plus practice facilitation
Active Comparator group
Description:
This arm will receive the CDS and practice facilitation.
Treatment:
Other: CDS plus practice facilitation

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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