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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07536919

Integrating Care for Hypertension-Diabetes MULTImorbidity in Guatemala Through HEARTS Implementation

Integrating Care for Hypertension-Diabetes MULTImorbidity in Guatemala Through HEARTS Implementation (MULTI-HEARTS)

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,440 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Michigan · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to find out whether a program called HEARTS can improve care for people who have both high blood pressure and diabetes. HEARTS was created by the World Health Organization to help primary care clinics deliver better treatment. It includes training for health workers, simpler treatment guides, better access to medicines, teamwork among clinic staff, and tracking systems to monitor patient care. In this study, 36 public primary care clinics in Guatemala will be randomly assigned to either use the HEARTS program or continue with their current care. About 1,440 adults who have both high blood pressure and diabetes will take part. Participants will be assessed at the start of the study and again after 12 months. The main measures are blood pressure and hemoglobin A1c (a blood test that shows average blood sugar levels over the past 2 to 3 months).

Detailed description

Hypertension and diabetes frequently co-occur and together are a leading cause of death and disability. Despite the availability of effective treatments, many patients remain untreated or uncontrolled. HEARTS is a package of implementation strategies recommended by the World Health Organization and Pan American Health Organization to improve cardiovascular disease management in primary care. To date, most HEARTS projects have focused on hypertension alone, and rigorous evaluations of HEARTS for integrated hypertension and diabetes care are lacking. This cluster-randomized trial will be conducted in 36 Ministry of Health primary care facilities (Health Centers) in Guatemala. Health Centers will be randomized 1:1 to HEARTS or enhanced usual care. The HEARTS intervention consists of five implementation strategies adapted to Guatemala: (1) training and supportive supervision for health workers; (2) simplifying treatment protocols; (3) strengthening supply chains of medications and supplies; (4) task sharing with non-physician health workers; and (5) implementing quality monitoring systems. The comparator arm receives enhanced usual care, which includes standard Ministry of Health clinical care plus supply chain strengthening to ensure between-arm differences are not attributable to medication availability. Approximately 1,440 patients with hypertension-diabetes multimorbidity (40 per facility) will be enrolled and assessed at baseline and 12 months. Co-primary outcomes are change in systolic blood pressure and hemoglobin A1c. Secondary outcomes include diastolic blood pressure, and proportions achieving blood pressure control (\<130/\<80 mmHg), hemoglobin A1c control (\<7.0%), and combined control. A cost-effectiveness and budget impact analysis will be conducted from the health care sector perspective. The implementation period is 30 months, followed by a 12-month maintenance period.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERHEARTS implementation strategiesA package of five multilevel implementation strategies based on the WHO/PAHO Hearts Technical Package, adapted to Guatemala: (1) Training and supportive supervision for health workers on evidence-based hypertension and diabetes treatment protocols; (2) Simplifying treatment protocols; (3) Strengthening supply chains of a core set of medications and supplies; (4) Task sharing with non-physician health workers; (5) Implementing quality monitoring systems using standardized registries and indicators.
OTHERSupply chain strengtheningStrengthening supply chains of a core set of medications and supplies for hypertension and diabetes care. This strategy is provided to both arms to ensure that observed between-arm differences are attributable to the other HEARTS implementation strategies rather than to variations in medication and supply availability.

Timeline

Start date
2027-05-01
Primary completion
2030-05-01
Completion
2030-05-01
First posted
2026-04-17
Last updated
2026-04-17

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07536919. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.