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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03093532

A Hypertension Emergency Department Intervention Aimed at Decreasing Disparities

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
150 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Illinois at Chicago · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
30 Years – 64 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Effective interventions that can address uncontrolled hypertension, particularly in underrepresented populations that use the emergency department (ED) for primary care, are critically needed. Uncontrolled hypertension (HTN) contributes significantly to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality and is more frequently encountered among patients presenting to the ED as compared to the primary care setting. EDs serve as the point of entry into the health care system for many high-risk patient populations, including minority and low-income patients. Based upon recent studies, the prevalence of uncontrolled/undiagnosed HTN in patients presenting to the ED is alarmingly high. Thus emergency department engagement and early risk assessment/stratification is a feasible innovation to help close health disparity gaps in HTN. This proposal involves a three-arm randomized controlled trial of 120 patients from the Emergency Department at University of Illinois Hospital with elevated blood pressure (BP) and no established primary care provider (PCP). The overarching goal is to improve follow-up rates and transition to PCP care at a federally qualified community health center (FQHC). The primary outcome will be blood pressure control. Secondary outcomes will be blood pressure improvement, treatment adherence, and hypertension knowledge. The central hypothesis of the proposal is that an ED-based screening, brief intervention, and referral for treatment program for HTN (SBIRT-HTN) using existing ED resources, coupled with a follow-up visit to an ED pharmacist-initiated Post-Acute Care Hypertension Transition Clinic (PACHT-c), can be impactful in a predominately underrepresented hypertensive population.

Detailed description

Effective interventions to address uncontrolled hypertension (HTN), particularly in underrepresented populations that use the emergency department (ED) for primary care, are critically needed. Uncontrolled HTN, which contributes significantly to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, is more frequently encountered among patients presenting to the ED. EDs serve as the point of entry into the health care system for many high-risk patient populations, particularly minority and low-income individuals. Our preliminary data from a largely minority patient population presenting to the ED shows significant rates of subclinical heart disease (diastolic dysfunction and left ventricular hypertrophy) in patients with elevated blood pressure (BP). These early echocardiogram changes are reversible with existing strategies for improving BP control. The proposed project underscores that 1) The prevalence of uncontrolled/undiagnosed HTN among ED patients from underrepresented groups who do not have a primary care physician (PCP) is alarmingly high, and 2) ED engagement and early risk assessment/stratification with facilitated PCP follow-up is a novel and feasible innovation to help address health disparity gaps in HTN. The central hypothesis of the proposal is that an ED-based screening, brief intervention, and referral for treatment program for HTN (SBIRT-HTN) using existing ED resources, coupled with a follow-up visit to an ED pharmacist-initiated Post-Acute Care Hypertension Transition Clinic (PACHT-c), will improve BP control through patient empowerment, facilitating PCP follow-up rates, and consequently improving treatment compliance in a predominately underrepresented hypertensive population. This proposal is strengthened by the existing partnership between an academic urban ED and a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) as a model for integrating secondary cardiovascular prevention in a population at high risk for complications due to uncontrolled/undiagnosed HTN. Moreover, this proposal is innovative as a prospective randomized controlled trial in a high-risk ED patient population with no established PCP and persistent elevated BPs. Eligible patients are those with elevated BP and no established PCP (or no PCP contact in the past year) who present to the University of Illinois Hospital \& Health Sciences System (UI Health) ED. The three arms are: 1) usual care (current practice of passive outpatient referral for follow-up care), 2) an ED-based SBIRT-HTN program (patient empowerment tool) using existing ED resources followed by assisted referral for usual care, and 3) the ED based SBIRT-HTN coupled with a 48-hour follow-up visit to an ED pharmacist-initiated Post-Acute Care Hypertension Transition Clinic (PACHT-c) followed by assisted referral for primary care. The aims evaluate the effectiveness of the interventions (SBIRT-HTN \& PACHTC-c) on uncontrolled BP at 6 months. The primary outcome will be BP improvement. Based on the demographics of the ED population at the study site (70% of the current UI Health ED population are ethnic minorities), the majority of participants will be underrepresented minorities (African-American and Hispanic/Latino) and low-income individuals. The investigators propose the following specific aims and hypotheses: Aim 1: Evaluate the effectiveness of an ED-initiated SBIRT-HTN program on BP control at 6 months post intervention compared to usual care. H1: Early identification and initiation of a risk stratification algorithm that involves non-invasive assessment (limited echocardiogram) for early subclinical cardiovascular disease (combined with patient education regarding HTN \& cardiovascular complications (patient empowerment) at the point-of contact in the ED (arm 2) will result in greater BP control at 6 months compared to the usual care group (arm 1). Aim 2: Evaluate the impact of the PACHT-c component with the ED-based SBIRT-HTN program on BP control at 6 months post intervention compared to usual care and ED-SBIRT-HTN alone. H2: The PACHT-c component (arm 3) will result in greater BP control compared to those randomized to usual care (arm 1) or ED-based SBIRT-HTN alone (arm 2).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERED SBIRT-HTNParticipants in the ED-SBIRT-HTN group will receive the following interventions: 1\) screening (risk assessment/stratification), 2) a limited bedside echocardiogram (looking for evidence of subclinical cardiac disease), and 3) a urine microalbumin test (marker of early cardiovascular disease).
OTHERPACHT-cParticipants randomized to the SBIRT-HTN +PACHT-c (Post-Acute Care Hypertension Transition Clinic) arm will receive all interventions of the ED SBIRT-HTN arm plus a 48-72 hour follow-up in the Post-Acute Care Hypertension Transition Clinic for repeat blood pressure assessment, review of screening assessments, and secured PCP appointment with a federally qualified health center within the study site's health system.

Timeline

Start date
2015-09-08
Primary completion
2017-07-30
Completion
2017-09-08
First posted
2017-03-28
Last updated
2020-04-16

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03093532. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.