| Literature DB >> 31517600 |
Rose Anne Felipe1, Marcus Plescia2, Emily Peterman2, Holly Tomlin3, Michael Sells4, Camillia Easley4, Kaha Ahmed4, Letitia Presley-Cantrell4.
Abstract
Thirty-one state and territorial public health agencies participated in a learning collaborative to improve diagnosis and management of hypertension in clinical and community settings. These health agencies implemented public health and clinical interventions in medical settings and health organizations using a logic model and rapid quality improvement process focused on a framework of 4 systems-change levers: 1) data-driven action, 2) clinical practice standardization, 3) clinical-community linkages, and 4) financing and policy. We provide examples of how public health agencies applied the systems-change framework in all 4 areas to assess and modify population-based interventions to improve control of hypertension. This learning collaborative approach illustrates the importance of public health in the prevention and control of chronic disease by supporting interventions that address community and clinical linkages to address medical risk factors associated with cardiovascular disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31517600 PMCID: PMC6745896 DOI: 10.5888/pcd16.190065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
FigureLogic model for ASTHO/CDC Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention Learning Collaborative. Abbreviations: ASTHO, Association of State and Territorial Health Officials; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; PDSA, Plan, Do, Study, Act; PH, public health; QI, quality improvement; TA, technical assistance.
State and Tribal Characteristics and Results of Evidenced-Based and Promising Best Practices in 3 States, ASTHO/CDC Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention Learning Collaborative, 2013–2018
| Best Practices Used to Achieve Results | New York State | Oklahoma | Arkansas |
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| Establish connections between health care, public health, and other jurisdictions to improve access to hypertension services and support throughout the care continuum, as well as increase data sharing among states and territories. | Local health departments and Federally Qualified Health Centers; home blood pressure monitoring program with clinical support; health information exchange data analysis. | Pharmacy hypertension clinic; Choctaw Nation health system and pharmacists; academic partnership with University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center College of Pharmacy. | Partnerships with providers, local health units, community pharmacies and senior centers in rural, underserved communities. |
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| Improve data exchange or capacity by using health information technology to facilitate patient identification, referral, and follow-up. | Metrics developed with electronic medical record data; data registries used to track and contact patients; data system used to evaluate and report clinical outcomes. | Data from electronic health records used to identify patients with uncontrolled hypertension for referral (counseling or management). | Used data from electronic medical records to identify undiagnosed hypertension. Partnership with Humana to improve quality of care. |
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| Implement protocols to ensure consistency in intervention implementation and data collection and analysis methods. | Adopted and implemented hypertension treatment protocols; home blood pressure program with clinical support; and systems for tracking and follow-up. | Developed a referral process; established a pharmacist–provider collaboration; educated and counseled patients; calculated arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk; and conducted blood pressure monitoring and follow-up. | Protocols for referrals to local clinics established a program for counseling by pharmacist; developed strategies for hypertension management based on a team-based care framework. |
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| Create a sustainable system to improve hypertension prevention, detection, and control through payment reform, and help jurisdictions leverage funding outside of the learning collaborative to establish systems of care or expand their programs and initiatives to other areas throughout the jurisdiction. | Instituted a 90-day pharmacy benefit to expand coverage for medications for hypertension in their Medicaid-managed care plans. | Computed a return of investment of $160 per dollar spent, based on the average emergency department cost of a single cardiovascular disease event. | Established a partnership with a private payer, a health care coalition, and a hospital to develop a payer model for transition of hypertension care from emergency departments to team-based care and medical homes. |
Abbreviations: ASTHO, Association of State and Territorial Health Officials; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.