| Literature DB >> 26474979 |
Kevin Fiscella1,2, Michele Boyd3, Julian Brown4, Jennifer Carroll5, Andrea Cassells6, Roberto Corales4, Wendi Cross7, Nayef El'Daher8, Subrina Farah3, Steven Fine9, Richard Fowler4, Ashley Hann8, Amneris Luque9, Jennifer Rodriquez6, Mechelle Sanders3,10, Jonathan Tobin6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient empowerment represents a potent tool for addressing racial, ethnic and socioeconomic disparities in health care, particularly for chronic conditions such as HIV infection that require active patient engagement. This multimodal intervention, developed in concert with HIV patients and clinicians, aims to provide HIV patients with the knowledge, skills, attitudes and tools to become more activated patients. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26474979 PMCID: PMC4608105 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2382-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Study Aims and Hypotheses
| Aim 1: Improve PLWH’s empowerment |
| H 1.1: We will improve patient activation; decision making ability; and perceived knowledge, comfort, and perceived skills at finding, evaluating, and applying electronic health information to health problems. |
| H 1.2: We will improve clinicians’ communication skills as perceived by PLWH. |
| Aim 2: Increase PLWH’s receipt of evidence-based care |
| H 2.1: We will improve patient confidence in adhering to combination antiretroviral treatment (cART), self-reported adherence to cART, and HIV viral suppression (undetectable viral load). |
| H 2.2: We will increase receipt of evidence-based clinical preventive services. |
| Aim 3: Improve PLWH’s health |
| H 3.1: We will improve mental, social, and overall health |
| Aim 4: Reduce disparities in PLWH’s empowerment |
| H 4.1: We will produce the greatest improvement in activation for those with lowest baseline activation. |
| H 4.2: We will observe comparable improvements by race, ethnicity, and education. |
Key tasks for group training
| •Project overview, value affirmation exercise, and basic use of the device (e.g. turning on and off, password, settings, etc.) |
| •Basic training in use of ePHR (recap and introduction to features, password, back-up, and importing contacts). |
| •Advanced training in use of ePHR (reminders, data entry, confirmation of data, To Ask list). |
| •Communication and use of web sites (training in formulating, prioritizing, asking questions, and bookmarking high quality web sites). |
| •Communication and health apps (role play challenging situations, using ePHR during visit, and downloading health relevant apps). |
Key tasks for pre-visit coaching
| •Bring iPod/ePHR (reminding the patients to bring their iPod to their patient coaching session and to their subsequent doctor visit). |
| •Preparation of questions (ensuring that the patient has identified and recorded in their iPod key questions to ask their clinician). |
| •Application and rehearsal of skills (coaching the patient through role play asking his/her questions. |
Study measures, data source, and timing
| Construct (Hypothesis) | Measure | Data type source | Collection points |
|---|---|---|---|
| Participant characteristics | |||
| Demographics | Standardized questions | Survey | T0 |
| Computer experience | Standardized questions | Survey | T0 |
| Health history | Standardized questions | Survey | T0 |
| Aim 1 (Empowerment) | |||
| Patient activation (H1.1) | PAM [ | Scale | T0, T1, T2 |
| Decision making (H1.1) | Decision Self Efficacy Scale [ | Scale | T0, T1, T2 |
| eHealth Literacy (H1.1) | eHEALS [ | Scale | T0, T1, T2 |
| Involvement in Care (H1.2) | Perceived Involvement in Care [ | Scale | T0, T1, T2 |
| Aim 2 (Evidence-based care) | |||
| HIV adherence self-efficacy (H2.1) | ASES [ | Survey | T0, T1, T2 |
| Adherence to cART (H2.1) | Past week adherence [ | Survey | T0, T1, T2 |
| HIV viral load <50 (H2.2) | HIV viral loads (both actual level; and whether undetectable or not) | Chart abstraction | T0, T2 |
| Evidenced based preventive care | Cancer screening/immunizations [ | Chart abstraction | T0, T3 |
| Aim 3 (Health) | |||
| Physical and Mental health/Quality of Life (H3.1) | SF-12 [ | Scale | T0, T1, T2 |
| Aim 4 (Moderators) | |||
| Low Activation (H4.1) | PAM and eHEALS (<median) | Scales | T0 |
| Minority race/ethnicity (H4.2) | Standardized questions | Survey | T0 |
| Low education (4.2) | Standardized questions | Survey | T0 |
| Clinician patient centeredness | Instrument on Doctor-Patient Communication Skills. [ | Scale |
Characteristics of PLWH in pilot study (n = 32)
| Age mean (Standard deviation) | 49 (10.2) |
|---|---|
| Gendera | |
| Female | 16 (50 %) |
| Male | 15 (47 %) |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| Hispanic | 8 (25 %) |
| Non-Hispanic White | 1 (3 %) |
| Non-Hispanic Black | 20 (63 %) |
| Other | 3 (6 %) |
| Computer Use (% none) | 7 (22 %) |
| Insurance Type | |
| Public (Medicaid/Medicare) | 30 (94 %) |
| Private | 0 (0 %) |
| ADAP | 4 (6 %) |
| Education | |
| <High school | 10 (31 %) |
| High school diploma or GED | 6 (19 %) |
| More than high school | 16 (50 %) |
| Annual Incomea | |
| <$20,000 | 29 (91 %) |
| $20,000–29,999 | 2 (6 %) |
| ≥$30,000 | 0 (0 %) |
aNote not all categories total 100 % due to missing values
Change in empowerment dimensions (effect size) by participant education, activation or eHealth literacy
| Empowerment dimension | <High school | High school | >High school | Low activation | High activation | Low eHealth literacy | High eHealth literacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV adherence self-efficacy | 0.15 | −0.64 | −0.19 | 0.18 | −0.38 | −0.02 | −0.05 |
| eHealth literacy | 0.85 | 0.35 | 0.61 | 0.98 | 0.18 | 0.94 | 0.35 |
| Perceived Involvement in Care | 0.57 | 0.37 | 0.24 | 0.61 | 0.11 | 0.48 | 0.26 |
| Decision self-efficacy | 0.81 | 0.23 | 0.34 | 0.86 | 0.16 | 0.48 | 0.52 |
| Patient Activation | 0.50 | −0.85 | 0.24 | 0.52 | −0.155 | 0.32 | 0.11 |