Cargando…

A multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol

BACKGROUND: Racial disparities in blood pressure control have been well documented in the United States. Research suggests that many factors contribute to this disparity, including barriers to care at patient, clinician, healthcare system, and community levels. To date, few interventions aimed at re...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cooper, Lisa A, Marsteller, Jill A, Noronha, Gary J, Flynn, Sarah J, Carson, Kathryn A, Boonyasai, Romsai T, Anderson, Cheryl A, Aboumatar, Hanan J, Roter, Debra L, Dietz, Katherine B, Miller, Edgar R, Prokopowicz, Gregory P, Dalcin, Arlene T, Charleston, Jeanne B, Simmons, Michelle, Huizinga, Mary Margaret
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3680084/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23734703
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-60
_version_ 1782273071845998592
author Cooper, Lisa A
Marsteller, Jill A
Noronha, Gary J
Flynn, Sarah J
Carson, Kathryn A
Boonyasai, Romsai T
Anderson, Cheryl A
Aboumatar, Hanan J
Roter, Debra L
Dietz, Katherine B
Miller, Edgar R
Prokopowicz, Gregory P
Dalcin, Arlene T
Charleston, Jeanne B
Simmons, Michelle
Huizinga, Mary Margaret
author_facet Cooper, Lisa A
Marsteller, Jill A
Noronha, Gary J
Flynn, Sarah J
Carson, Kathryn A
Boonyasai, Romsai T
Anderson, Cheryl A
Aboumatar, Hanan J
Roter, Debra L
Dietz, Katherine B
Miller, Edgar R
Prokopowicz, Gregory P
Dalcin, Arlene T
Charleston, Jeanne B
Simmons, Michelle
Huizinga, Mary Margaret
author_sort Cooper, Lisa A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Racial disparities in blood pressure control have been well documented in the United States. Research suggests that many factors contribute to this disparity, including barriers to care at patient, clinician, healthcare system, and community levels. To date, few interventions aimed at reducing hypertension disparities have addressed factors at all of these levels. This paper describes the design of Project ReD CHiP (Reducing Disparities and Controlling Hypertension in Primary Care), a multi-level system quality improvement project. By intervening on multiple levels, this project aims to reduce disparities in blood pressure control and improve guideline concordant hypertension care. METHODS: Using a pragmatic trial design, we are implementing three complementary multi-level interventions designed to improve blood pressure measurement, provide patient care management services and offer expanded provider education resources in six primary care clinics in Baltimore, Maryland. We are staggering the introduction of the interventions and will use Statistical Process Control (SPC) charting to determine if there are changes in outcomes at each clinic after implementation of each intervention. The main hypothesis is that each intervention will have an additive effect on improvements in guideline concordant care and reductions in hypertension disparities, but the combination of all three interventions will result in the greatest impact, followed by blood pressure measurement with care management support, blood pressure measurement with provider education, and blood pressure measurement only. This study also examines how organizational functioning and cultural competence affect the success of the interventions. DISCUSSION: As a quality improvement project, Project ReD CHiP employs a novel study design that specifically targets multi-level factors known to contribute to hypertension disparities. To facilitate its implementation and improve its sustainability, we have incorporated stakeholder input and tailored components of the interventions to meet the specific needs of the involved clinics and communities. Results from this study will provide knowledge about how integrated multi-level interventions can improve hypertension care and reduce disparities. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01566864
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3680084
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-36800842013-06-13 A multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol Cooper, Lisa A Marsteller, Jill A Noronha, Gary J Flynn, Sarah J Carson, Kathryn A Boonyasai, Romsai T Anderson, Cheryl A Aboumatar, Hanan J Roter, Debra L Dietz, Katherine B Miller, Edgar R Prokopowicz, Gregory P Dalcin, Arlene T Charleston, Jeanne B Simmons, Michelle Huizinga, Mary Margaret Implement Sci Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Racial disparities in blood pressure control have been well documented in the United States. Research suggests that many factors contribute to this disparity, including barriers to care at patient, clinician, healthcare system, and community levels. To date, few interventions aimed at reducing hypertension disparities have addressed factors at all of these levels. This paper describes the design of Project ReD CHiP (Reducing Disparities and Controlling Hypertension in Primary Care), a multi-level system quality improvement project. By intervening on multiple levels, this project aims to reduce disparities in blood pressure control and improve guideline concordant hypertension care. METHODS: Using a pragmatic trial design, we are implementing three complementary multi-level interventions designed to improve blood pressure measurement, provide patient care management services and offer expanded provider education resources in six primary care clinics in Baltimore, Maryland. We are staggering the introduction of the interventions and will use Statistical Process Control (SPC) charting to determine if there are changes in outcomes at each clinic after implementation of each intervention. The main hypothesis is that each intervention will have an additive effect on improvements in guideline concordant care and reductions in hypertension disparities, but the combination of all three interventions will result in the greatest impact, followed by blood pressure measurement with care management support, blood pressure measurement with provider education, and blood pressure measurement only. This study also examines how organizational functioning and cultural competence affect the success of the interventions. DISCUSSION: As a quality improvement project, Project ReD CHiP employs a novel study design that specifically targets multi-level factors known to contribute to hypertension disparities. To facilitate its implementation and improve its sustainability, we have incorporated stakeholder input and tailored components of the interventions to meet the specific needs of the involved clinics and communities. Results from this study will provide knowledge about how integrated multi-level interventions can improve hypertension care and reduce disparities. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01566864 BioMed Central 2013-06-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3680084/ /pubmed/23734703 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-60 Text en Copyright © 2013 Cooper et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Cooper, Lisa A
Marsteller, Jill A
Noronha, Gary J
Flynn, Sarah J
Carson, Kathryn A
Boonyasai, Romsai T
Anderson, Cheryl A
Aboumatar, Hanan J
Roter, Debra L
Dietz, Katherine B
Miller, Edgar R
Prokopowicz, Gregory P
Dalcin, Arlene T
Charleston, Jeanne B
Simmons, Michelle
Huizinga, Mary Margaret
A multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol
title A multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol
title_full A multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol
title_fullStr A multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol
title_full_unstemmed A multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol
title_short A multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol
title_sort multi-level system quality improvement intervention to reduce racial disparities in hypertension care and control: study protocol
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3680084/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23734703
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-8-60
work_keys_str_mv AT cooperlisaa amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT marstellerjilla amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT noronhagaryj amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT flynnsarahj amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT carsonkathryna amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT boonyasairomsait amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT andersoncheryla amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT aboumatarhananj amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT roterdebral amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT dietzkatherineb amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT milleredgarr amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT prokopowiczgregoryp amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT dalcinarlenet amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT charlestonjeanneb amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT simmonsmichelle amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT huizingamarymargaret amultilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT cooperlisaa multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT marstellerjilla multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT noronhagaryj multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT flynnsarahj multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT carsonkathryna multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT boonyasairomsait multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT andersoncheryla multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT aboumatarhananj multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT roterdebral multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT dietzkatherineb multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT milleredgarr multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT prokopowiczgregoryp multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT dalcinarlenet multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT charlestonjeanneb multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT simmonsmichelle multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol
AT huizingamarymargaret multilevelsystemqualityimprovementinterventiontoreduceracialdisparitiesinhypertensioncareandcontrolstudyprotocol