Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 2024 East Monument Street, Suite 2-515, Baltimore, Maryland 21287, USA.
Implement Sci. 2013 Jun 4;8:60. doi: 10.1186/1748-5908-8-60.
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.
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.
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.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01566864.
在美国,血压控制方面的种族差异已经得到充分记录。研究表明,许多因素导致了这种差异,包括患者、临床医生、医疗保健系统和社区层面的护理障碍。迄今为止,很少有旨在减少高血压差异的干预措施涉及到所有这些层面的因素。本文介绍了项目 ReD CHiP(在初级保健中减少差异和控制高血压)的设计,这是一个多层次的系统质量改进项目。通过在多个层面进行干预,该项目旨在减少血压控制方面的差异,并改善符合指南的高血压护理。
使用实用临床试验设计,我们正在实施三种互补的多层次干预措施,旨在改善血压测量、提供患者护理管理服务,并在马里兰州巴尔的摩的六家初级保健诊所提供扩展的提供者教育资源。我们正在交错引入这些干预措施,并将使用统计过程控制 (SPC) 图表来确定在每个干预措施实施后,每个诊所的结果是否有变化。主要假设是,每个干预措施都将对改善符合指南的护理和减少高血压差异产生附加效果,但三种干预措施的组合将产生最大的影响,其次是血压测量与护理管理支持、血压测量与提供者教育以及仅血压测量。本研究还研究了组织功能和文化能力如何影响干预措施的成功。
作为一个质量改进项目,项目 ReD CHiP 采用了一种新颖的研究设计,专门针对已知导致高血压差异的多层次因素。为了促进其实施并提高其可持续性,我们已经整合了利益相关者的投入,并根据参与诊所和社区的具体需求调整了干预措施的组成部分。这项研究的结果将提供关于综合多层次干预措施如何改善高血压护理和减少差异的知识。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01566864。