Franz Calvin, Atwood Sidney, Orav E John, Curley Cameron, Brown Christian, Trevisi Letizia, Nelson Adrianne Katrina, Begay Mae-Gilene, Shin Sonya
Eastern Research Group, Inc., Lexington, MA, USA.
Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 May 25;20(1):460. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-05231-4.
Navajo community members face high rates of diabetes mellitus and other chronic diseases. The Navajo Community Health Representative Outreach Program collaborated with healthcare providers and academic partners to implement structured and coordinated outreach to patients living with diabetes. The intervention, called Community Outreach and Patient Empowerment or COPE, provides home-based health coaching and community-clinic linkages to promote self-management and engagement in healthcare services among patients living with diabetes. The purpose of this study was to evaluate how outreach by Navajo Community Health Representatives ("COPE Program") affected utilization of health care services among patients living with diabetes.
De-identified data from 2010 to 2014 were abstracted from electronic health records at participating health facilities. In this observational cohort study, 173 cases were matched to 2880 controls. Healthcare utilization was measured as the number of times per quarter services were accessed by the patient. Changes in utilization over 4 years were modeled using a difference-in-differences approach, comparing the trajectory of COPE patients' utilization before versus after enrollment with that of the control group. The model was estimated using generalized linear mixed models for count outcomes, controlling for clustering at the patient level and the service unit level.
COPE enrollees showed a 2.5% per patient per quarter (pppq) greater increase in total utilization (p = 0.001) of healthcare services than non-COPE enrollees; a 3.2% greater increase in primary care visits (p = 0.024); a 6.3% greater increase in utilization of counseling and behavioral health services (p = 0.013); and a 9.0% greater increase in pharmacy visits (p < 0.001). We found no statistically significant differences in utilization trends of inpatient, emergency room, specialty outpatient, dental, laboratory, radiology, or community encounter services among COPE participants versus control.
A structured intervention consisting of Community Health Representative outreach and coordination with clinic-based providers was associated with a modest increase in health care utilization, including primary care and counseling services, among Navajo patients living with diabetes. Community health workers may provide an important linkage to enable patients to access and engage in clinic-based health care.
NCT03326206, registered 10/31/2017, retrospectively registered.
纳瓦霍族社区成员面临着较高的糖尿病及其他慢性病发病率。纳瓦霍族社区健康代表外展项目与医疗服务提供者及学术合作伙伴合作,对糖尿病患者实施结构化且协调一致的外展服务。这项名为“社区外展与患者赋权”(简称COPE)的干预措施提供居家健康指导以及社区诊所联系,以促进糖尿病患者的自我管理并提高其参与医疗服务的程度。本研究的目的是评估纳瓦霍族社区健康代表的外展服务(“COPE项目”)对糖尿病患者医疗服务利用情况的影响。
从参与研究的医疗机构的电子健康记录中提取2010年至2014年的匿名数据。在这项观察性队列研究中,173例病例与2880例对照进行匹配。医疗服务利用情况以患者每季度使用服务的次数来衡量。采用双重差分法对4年期间的利用情况变化进行建模,比较COPE患者入组前后与对照组的利用情况轨迹。该模型使用广义线性混合模型对计数结果进行估计,控制患者层面和服务单元层面的聚类情况。
与未参与COPE的患者相比,参与COPE的患者的医疗服务总利用率每季度每人增加幅度高2.5%(p = 0.001);初级保健就诊次数增加幅度高3.2%(p = 0.024);咨询及行为健康服务利用率增加幅度高6.3%(p = 0.013);药房就诊次数增加幅度高9.0%(p < 0.001)。我们发现,COPE参与者与对照组在住院、急诊、专科门诊、牙科、实验室、放射科或社区就诊服务的利用趋势上没有统计学显著差异。
由社区健康代表外展服务并与诊所医疗服务提供者协调组成的结构化干预措施,与纳瓦霍族糖尿病患者的医疗服务利用适度增加相关,包括初级保健和咨询服务。社区卫生工作者可能提供了一个重要的联系渠道,使患者能够获得并参与基于诊所的医疗服务。
NCT03326206,于2017年10月31日注册,追溯注册。