Strengthening Referral Networks for Management of Hypertension Across the Health System (STRENGTHS)
NCT ID: NCT03543787
Last Updated: 2023-03-16
Study Results
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Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
PHASE3
1600 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-01-17
2023-05-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare (AMPATH) partners with the Kenya Ministry of Health to provide care for non-communicable chronic diseases (NCDs), including hypertension at all levels of the health system. The Kenya Ministry of Health Sector Referral Strategy 2014-2018 calls for improving the referral system at every level of the health system. AMPATH has piloted both health information technology and peer support for NCDs, and both strategies are feasible in this setting. However, the impact of integrating Health information technology and peer support to strengthen referral networks for hypertension control is unknown.
The proposal's objective is to utilise the PRECEDE-PROCEED framework to conduct trans-disciplinary, translational implementation research focused on strengthening referral networks for hypertension control. The central hypothesis is "Health Information Technology integrated with peer support will be effective and cost-effective in strengthening referral networks, improving blood pressure control, and reducing cardiovascular risk among hypertensive patients in western Kenya." The investigators hypothesise that Health information technology(HIT) and peer support(PS) will synergistically address barriers to hypertension control at the patient, provider and health system levels. The investigators further hypothesise that changes in referral network characteristics may mediate the impact of the intervention on the primary outcome, and that baseline referral net-work characteristics may moderate the impact of the intervention. To test these hypotheses and achieve the overall objective, STRENGTHS has the following specific aims:
Aim 1: Conduct a baseline needs and contextual assessment for implementing and integrating HIT and PS to strengthen referral networks for hypertension control, using a mixed-methods approach, including: observational process mapping and gap assessment; baseline referral network analysis; and qualitative methods to identify facilitators, barriers, contextual factors, and readiness for change.
Sub-Aim 1.1: Use data from the aim 1 to develop a contextually and culturally appropriate intervention to strengthen referral networks for hypertension control using a participatory, iterative design process. Conduct pilot acceptability and feasibility testing of the intervention.
Aim 2: Evaluate the effectiveness of HIT and PS for hypertension control by conducting a two-arm cluster randomized trial comparing: 1) usual care vs. 2) referral networks strengthened with an integrated HIT-PS intervention. The primary outcome will be one-year change in systolic blood pressure and a key secondary outcome will be cardiovascular risk reduction.
Sub-Aim 2.1: Conduct mediation analysis to evaluate the influence of changes in referral network characteristics on intervention outcomes, and a moderation analysis to evaluate the influence of baseline referral net-work characteristics on the effectiveness of the intervention.
Sub-Aim 2.2: Conduct a process evaluation using the Saunders framework, evaluating key implementation measures related to fidelity, dose delivered, dose received, recruitment, reach, and context.
Aim 3: Evaluate the incremental cost-effectiveness of the intervention, in terms of costs per unit decrease in SBP, per percent change in CVD risk score, and per disability-adjusted life year (DALY) saved.
This research project will add to the existing knowledge base on innovative and scalable strategies for strengthening referral networks to improve control of NCDs in lower-MICs. If proven to be effective, it has the potential to be a scalable model for other low-resource settings globally.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Health IT and Peer Support Intervention
Utilise electronic decision support, tracking of referral list and Peer facilitation for referral completion
Health IT and Peer Support Intervention
Health IT will support referral system by establishing 1) communication between healthcare providers and peer navigators 2) decision support for clinician to facilitate appropriate referrals 3) tracking of referred patients real-time 4) dashboards to monitor key evaluation metrics.
Peer Support intervention: peer navigators at each level of the referral network will ensure 1) referral adherence by link clinicians and patients 2) health system navigation 3) psychosocial support: leverage their shared disease experience to help patients overcome barriers to health seeking behaviour.
Non intervention group
2014 - 2018 MoH referral protocol
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Health IT and Peer Support Intervention
Health IT will support referral system by establishing 1) communication between healthcare providers and peer navigators 2) decision support for clinician to facilitate appropriate referrals 3) tracking of referred patients real-time 4) dashboards to monitor key evaluation metrics.
Peer Support intervention: peer navigators at each level of the referral network will ensure 1) referral adherence by link clinicians and patients 2) health system navigation 3) psychosocial support: leverage their shared disease experience to help patients overcome barriers to health seeking behaviour.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Enrolled in AMPATH CDM Program
* meet criteria for referral up or down the network
* Patients with complicated hypertension meet criteria for referral up the network, defined as patients with hypertension who remain uncontrolled (SBP \>= 140 or DBP \>= 90) on 3 or more anti-hypertensive medications, who have signs or symptoms of end-organ damage, or who have suspected secondary causes of hypertension (age \<35 years, HIV, or pregnancy)
* Patients with stable, uncomplicated hypertension meet criteria for referral down the network, defined as controlled BP (SBP \< 140 and DBP \< 90) for 3 or more consecutive visits and no evidence of new end-organ damage
Exclusion Criteria
* terminal illness
* inability to provide informed consent
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Indiana University
OTHER
Duke University
OTHER
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
OTHER
Purdue University
OTHER
University of Texas at Austin
OTHER
Moi University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Constantine O Akwanalo
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Moi University
Locations
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Constantine Akwanalo
Eldoret, , Kenya
Countries
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References
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Naanyu V, Njuguna B, Koros H, Andesia J, Kamano J, Mercer T, Bloomfield G, Pastakia S, Vedanthan R, Akwanalo C. Community engagement to inform development of strategies to improve referral for hypertension: perspectives of patients, providers and local community members in western Kenya. BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 Aug 11;23(1):854. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-09847-0.
Thakkar A, Valente T, Andesia J, Njuguna B, Miheso J, Mercer T, Mugo R, Mwangi A, Mwangi E, Pastakia SD, Pathak S, Pillsbury MKM, Kamano J, Naanyu V, Williams M, Vedanthan R, Akwanalo C, Bloomfield GS. Network characteristics of a referral system for patients with hypertension in Western Kenya: results from the Strengthening Referral Networks for Management of Hypertension Across the Health System (STRENGTHS) study. BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Mar 7;22(1):315. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-07699-8.
Mercer T, Njuguna B, Bloomfield GS, Dick J, Finkelstein E, Kamano J, Mwangi A, Naanyu V, Pastakia SD, Valente TW, Vedanthan R, Akwanalo C. Strengthening Referral Networks for Management of Hypertension Across the Health System (STRENGTHS) in western Kenya: a study protocol of a cluster randomized trial. Trials. 2019 Sep 9;20(1):554. doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3661-4.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol, Statistical Analysis Plan, and Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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