Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05126082

Pediatric Blood Pressure Clinical Decision Support Tool (PedsBP CDS)

Improving Recognition and Management of Hypertension in Youth: Comparing Approaches for Extending Effective CDS for Use in a Large Rural Health System

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
41,054 (actual)
Sponsor
HealthPartners Institute · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The goal of the PedsBP CDS research project is to adapt a previously tested web-based clinical decision support tool that appropriately identifies high blood pressure in youth for use in a primarily rural health system and compare approaches to CDS implementation in 45 primary care clinics treating children in 3 upper Midwest states. This project will advance implementation science and address a critical need for youth at risk for cardiovascular disease and with limited access to pediatric subspecialty care.

Detailed description

Hypertension (HT) in youth tracks into adulthood, contributing to adult cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. National guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of HT in children and adolescents were last updated in 2017, with definitions for HT that vary by age. To date, most children and adolescents with elevated blood pressure (BP) or HT are not diagnosed or inadequately treated. Factors that contribute to these deficits in care include: the need to translate pediatric BP measures into BP percentiles, lack of clinician familiarity with pediatric HT guidelines, and competing demands at clinical encounters. Electronic health record (EHR)-linked clinical decision support (CDS) can be used to address these barriers and improve the identification and management of elevated BP and HT in children and adolescents. In a previous study, the investigators developed, implemented, and evaluated a sophisticated web-based, EHR-linked CDS to provide patient-specific clinical care recommendations in real time and in accordance with national guidelines for BP management in youth. In a 2-year cluster randomized trial in 20 urban and suburban primary care clinics in an integrated health system in Minnesota, the investigators demonstrated that the CDS increased repeat measurement of elevated BP during a visit and more than doubled clinician recognition of HT, while promoting dietitian referrals and additional next steps in care consistent with national guidelines. The CDS system was well accepted by providers and as such, is now standard of care in 55 primary care and 17 subspecialty clinics serving children across our health system. Implementation of this CDS in a new health system is a logical next step, yet optimal strategies for adaptation and implementation of CDS in clinics serving rural populations have not been well described. In this study, the investigators will implement PedsBP CDS in a large health system with many clinics located in rural regions of Minnesota, Wisconsin and North Dakota. In order to compare approaches to implementation of PedsBP CDS to usual care, the investigators will randomly assign 15 primary care clinics to receive high-intensity implementation (CDS with online and in-person training, and audit-feedback), 15 clinics to receive low-intensity implementation (CDS with online training only), and 15 clinics will continue with usual care (no CDS).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPedsBP CDSThe PedsBP CDS is a sophisticated web-based electronic health record (EHR)-linked tool that can be used to address barriers and improve the identification and management of elevated blood pressure (BP) and hypertension (HT) in children and adolescents by providing patient-specific clinical care recommendations in real time and in accordance with national guidelines for BP management in youth.

Timeline

Start date
2022-08-01
Primary completion
2025-01-31
Completion
2025-07-31
First posted
2021-11-18
Last updated
2026-01-22
Results posted
2026-01-22

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05126082. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.