| Literature DB >> 23433349 |
Rachel Willard-Grace1, Denise DeVore, Ellen H Chen, Danielle Hessler, Thomas Bodenheimer, David H Thom.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many patients with chronic disease do not reach goals for management of their conditions. Self-management support provided by medical assistant health coaches within the clinical setting may help to improve clinical outcomes, but most studies to date lack statistical power or methodological rigor. Barriers to large scale implementation of the medical assistant coach model include lack of clinician buy-in and the absence of a business model that will make medical assistant health coaching sustainable. This study will add to the evidence base by determining the effectiveness of health coaching by medical assistants on clinical outcomes and patient self-management, by assessing the impact of health coaching on the clinician experience, and by examining the costs and potential savings of health coaching. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23433349 PMCID: PMC3616979 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-14-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Figure 1Consort diagram.
Figure 2Proportion of participants meeting each of the 3 eligibility criteria.
Comparison of enrolled patients and refusals
| Age | 53.1 (11.1) | 54.3 (12.6) | |
| Gender (female) | 57.6% (254) | 55.9% (119) | |
| Language (Spanish) | 72.6% (320) | 55.9% (119) | p < .001 |
| Clinic (Clinic A) | 75.3% (332) | 60.6% (129) | p < .001 |
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients enrolled (n = 441)
| | ||
| Age | | 52.7 ± 11.1 |
| Gender (female) | | 55.3% (244) |
| Currently married or in long term relationship | | 53.1% (234) |
| Born in the US | | 25.6% (113) |
| Years in US* | | 18.2 ± 11.1 |
| Primary Language: | English | 27.7% (122) |
| | Spanish | 68.7% (303) |
| | Other | 3.6% (16) |
| Ethnicity: | Asian | 4.1% (18) |
| | African American | 19.0% (84) |
| | Latino or Hispanic | 70.1% (309) |
| | White | 2.5% (11) |
| | Other | 4.3% (19) |
| Working status: | Full time | 18.6% (82) |
| | Part time | 25.6% (113) |
| | Homemaker | 13.8% (61) |
| | Unemployed | 16.1% (71) |
| | Retired | 10.0% (44) |
| | Disabled/SSI | 13.6% (60) |
| | Other | 2.3% (10) |
| Education: | Never went to school | 4.3% (19) |
| | 1st to 5th grade | 18.4% (81) |
| | 6th to 8th grade | 21.1% (93) |
| | Some high school | 13.4% (59) |
| | High school grad or GED | 17.7% (78) |
| | Some college | 15.6% (69) |
| | College graduate | 9.5% (42) |
| Income: | Less than 5 K | 34.0% (150) |
| | 5 K-10 K | 24.3% (107) |
| | 10-20 K | 29.5% (130) |
| | 20-40 K | 10.2% (45) |
| | More than 40 K | 2.0% (9) |
| Clinic: | Clinic A | 75.3% (332) |
| | Clinic B | 24.7% (109) |
| Total length of coming to clinic for care (years) | | 8.7 ± 8.1 |
| | ||
| Body mass index (BMI) | | 31.4 ± 6.8 |
| Hemoglobin A1c** | | 9.9 ± 1.5 |
| Low-density lipoprotein (LDL)** | | 146.7 ± 34.7 |
| Systolic blood pressure** | 159.4 ± 15.4 | |
* For the 328 participants born outside the United States.
**Includes only patients qualifying for the study on this measure (n = 158 for hemoglobin A1c, 229 for LDL, and 192 for systolic blood pressure).