Utilizing a Promotora Model for Rural Adult Hispanics Diagnosed With Metabolic Syndrome: A Clinical Trial

NCT ID: NCT01839864

Last Updated: 2017-02-14

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

WITHDRAWN

Clinical Phase

NA

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2013-09-30

Study Completion Date

2016-08-31

Brief Summary

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The study aims are to test whether the use of promotoras significantly impacts the health attitudes, health seeking behaviors, and patient confidence in self-managing health of rural Hispanic adults who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome. Specifically, the study is designed to address four areas of inquiry: 1) identification of patient attitudes involving: a) trust in medical providers and in the health care system, b) procedural fairness in treatment, c) provider and patient communication patterns, d) potential cultural bias in treatment, and e) healthy lifestyle behavior adoption/maintenance, 2) selected clinical indicators of metabolic syndrome (blood pressure, height/weight/BMI, blood glucose, hemoglobin A1c, and cholesterol), 3) the cultural competence of medical providers from the perspective of both the provider and the patient, and 4) patient self-management confidence scores.

Detailed Description

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The following research questions will be investigated in this study:

1. For adult rural Hispanic patients who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome, does adding the services of a promotora to a standard care model significantly change the metrics associated with metabolic syndrome to a greater extent than a standard care model only?
2. For adult rural Hispanic patients who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome, does adding the services of a promotora to a standard care model significantly change the attitude of trust in medical providers and the health care system to a greater extent than a standard care model only?
3. For adult rural Hispanic patients who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome, does adding the services of a promotora to a standard care model significantly change the attitudes associated with comfort with seeking care in the health care system to a greater extent than a standard care model only?
4. For adult rural Hispanic patients who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome, does adding the services of a promotora to a standard care model significantly change the perception of cultural bias in regard to treatment as compared with patients using the standard care model only?
5. For adult rural Hispanic patients who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome, does adding the services of a promotora to a standard care model significantly change the attitudes associated with feelings of procedural fairness in health care treatment to a greater extent than a standard care model only?
6. For adult rural Hispanic patients who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome, does adding the services of a promotora to a standard care model significantly change the Patient Activation Measure (PAM) score over time as compared with patients utilizing only the standard care model?
7. For adult rural Hispanic patients who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome, does adding the services of a promotora to a standard care model significantly change the doctor-patient communication score over time as compared with patients utilizing only the standard care model?
8. For rural Hispanic patients who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome, does adding the services of a promotora to a standard care model significantly change the perception of the cultural competence of providers as compared with patients experiencing the standard care model only?

The proposed study utilizes a randomized clinical trial design to assess the efficacy of combining community health worker/ promotora services plus standard clinical care versus a standard clinical care model only for rural Hispanic patients diagnosed with metabolic syndrome. This design has been selected because: 1) it best protects against possible confounding, 2) there are no ethical issues with the study as all participants receive at a minimum the current standard of care for metabolic syndrome, 3) three years is enough time to assess results, and 4) sufficient staffing is available. In order to answer the research questions posed earlier, primary data must be collected since a design that analyzes secondary data is not sufficient in this instance.

Patients will be identified from three primary care clinics in Southern Idaho where they receive care. The clinics are located in Caldwell, Nampa, and Jerome, Idaho. Caldwell has a population of 47,000 (50.6% female) with 35% being Hispanic and 26% speaking Spanish as their primary language. Nampa has a population of 81,000 (51% female) with 23% being Hispanic and 17% of homes not having English as their primary language. Jerome has a population of 11,000 (49.5% female) with 34% being Hispanic and approximately 24% of the homes with Spanish as the primary language spoken.32 The Family Medicine Residency of Idaho (FMRI) has two Rural Training Track (RTT) programs that will be participating, one in Caldwell and one in Jerome (about 130 miles east of Caldwell). A third site will be a clinic (35% of patients are Hispanic) in rural Nampa, a community located about 15 miles outside of Boise. Each of these rural clinics sees between 1,000 (Nampa and Jerome) and 1,800 (Caldwell) unduplicated adult Hispanic patients per year, and an estimated 10-20% have metabolic syndrome or are at extreme risk for developing this condition. After a review of medical records, those patients identified with metabolic syndrome will be sent a letter inviting participation in the study. Patients from outside the clinics will also be eligible to participate by being notified of the opportunity through community advertising on Spanish language radio and in churches, restaurants, and grocery stores frequented by members of the Hispanic community. A patient recruitment coordinator will be employed for this purpose, and he/she will continue to recruit until the number of patients needed to reach an adequate sample size and who agree to participate is reached. No more than one patient per family will be allowed to participate in the study. The Caldwell Clinic will seek to have 128 patients in each of the intervention and control groups (four cohorts of 32 in each of the intervention and control groups). Each of the other two clinics will have a goal of 60 patients in each of the groups (three cohorts of 20 in each of the intervention and control groups). The cumulative number of 248 per group (sum of total enrollments from each clinic) is to allow for a 10-12% attrition rate throughout the study timeframe and still retain statistical power to detect differences that might exist between groups. If the 10% attrition occurs, each group would still have an "n" of 225 which is the value used to determine the statistical power in the analysis subsection of this plan. A chart in the appendices illustrates the study sites, cohort sizes, and dates of data collection. Although discussed in detail in Section Four, only those patients meeting the inclusion criteria and who consent to participate will be included in the study.

All participants in this study will be adult rural residing patients of Hispanic ethnicity diagnosed with metabolic syndrome. Patients from each clinic will be randomized into a control group (total three clinic n = 248) and an intervention group (total three clinic n = 248) with the intervention group receiving education from a promotora in addition to the standard treatment and the control group receiving the standard treatment protocol. All patients will receive annual physical exams and appropriate lab tests (lab tests every six months) and regular MD follow up. At time of introduction into the study and at six month intervals for a period of one year, all participants will complete a patient activation measure (PAM) and other qualitative attitude measures that will be described in more detail later in this section. Initiation of the study will be staggered with the Caldwell clinic starting in January 2014 and the other two clinics starting in April of 2015. Again, please see the appendices for a detailed study plan chart complete with timelines. The use of multiple clinics helps minimize (or at least allows for control for) the potential influence of clinic environment and provider effects and enables better control for possible cohort and history effects.

Using the Caldwell clinic as an example, each of the two promotoras will work with 16 patients over a three month period. During this timeframe, they will conduct four home education visits with each patient and four group sessions with their entire 16 member cohort. At the conclusion of the first three months, a new 16 patient cohort/promotora will be started with new intervention patients. This three month intense contact sequence for Caldwell patients will be repeated over four cycles until all 128 intervention patients have experienced promotora exposure. Following their three month intense promotora exposure all intervention patients will experience once monthly large group sessions with a promotora for a total of nine months and will complete qualitative questionnaires and laboratory tests at six month intervals until one year from their start date arrives. After a patient's one year anniversary of beginning the study protocol, the study will end for that person. Each intervention cohort will be accompanied by a control group of patients equal in number. The one year timeframe for each clinic helps reduce the chances of an elevated drop-out rate.

This pattern will repeat itself in year two with the Nampa clinic and the Jerome clinic each having one promotora with 20 intervention patient cohorts beginning on April 1, 2015. Because each of these clinics is smaller than Caldwell, three cycles (instead of four) of three month intense promotora exposure (4 individual and 4 group sessions) will be held and fewer patients will be recruited. Of course, each 20 person cohort will be mirrored by a 20 patient control group. Again after the intense promotora exposure, all intervention patients will experience once monthly large group sessions with a promotora and will complete qualitative questionnaires and laboratory tests at six month intervals until one year from their start date arrives.

For all clinics, patients assigned to the control group will have an entrance physical screening and complete their qualitative questionnaires and PAM instrument and have laboratory tests at the start of the study, at six month intervals, and an exit physical exam one year after enrolling in the study.

Promotoras will be recruited from each community with significant input from members of the Hispanic Community Advisory Board (CAB) that has been actively involved in the Companeros en Salud (CES) or Partners in Health (PIH) program through the Idaho Partnership for Hispanic Health for the past five years. The promotora training model for this study is adapted from the established curriculum for that project. Standard templates for recruitment and training have been developed by Linda Powell, Principal Investigator of the Companeros en Salud project. Co-PI Lynda Bennett of Mountain States Group will direct the recruitment, training and ongoing support/oversight of promotoras to ensure consistency of delivery of intervention trainings across the three communities, as well as timeliness and fidelity to the topics they are to discuss with group members and their families.

Conditions

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Metabolic Syndrome

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

TRIPLE

Caregivers Investigators Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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Promotora plus standard care model

Promotora plus standard physical screening exam, hemoglobin A1c levels, lipid panels, fasting glucose, height, weight, BMI, Complete Blood Count

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Promotora plus standard physical screening exam , hemoglobin A1c levels, lipid panels, fasting glucose, height, weight, BMI, Complete Blood Count

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Promotora services plus the standard care model will be provided for one randomly assigned cohort of patients meeting the inclusion criteria while the other cohort will receive the standard care model only

Interventions

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Promotora plus standard physical screening exam , hemoglobin A1c levels, lipid panels, fasting glucose, height, weight, BMI, Complete Blood Count

Promotora services plus the standard care model will be provided for one randomly assigned cohort of patients meeting the inclusion criteria while the other cohort will receive the standard care model only

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Adult
* Rural dwelling Hispanics who have been diagnosed with metabolic syndrome

Exclusion Criteria

* All others
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Mountain States Group

UNKNOWN

Sponsor Role collaborator

Saint Alphonsus Medical Group

UNKNOWN

Sponsor Role collaborator

Quantified, Inc.

INDUSTRY

Sponsor Role collaborator

Family Medicine Residency of Idaho

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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James T Girvan, PhD, MPH

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Family Medicine Residency of Idaho

James Gardner, MD

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

Saint Aphonsus Medical Group and Family Medicine Residency of Idaho Rural Training Track Director

Ted Epperly, MD

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Family Medicine Residency of Idaho

Locations

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Saint Alphonsus Medical Group Caldwell Clinic

Caldwell, Idaho, United States

Site Status

Saint Lukes Clinic Jerome

Jerome, Idaho, United States

Site Status

St Alphonsus Medical Group Nampa Clinic

Nampa, Idaho, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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FMRI Promotora Trial

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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