| Literature DB >> 33738969 |
Gloria P Giraldo1, Kristy T Joseph2, Sonia Y Angell3, Norm R C Campbell4, Kenneth Connell5, Donald J DiPette6, Maria C Escobar7, Yamile Valdés-Gonzalez8, Marc G Jaffe9, Taraleen Malcolm10, Javier Maldonado11, Patricio Lopez-Jaramillo12,13, Michaels Hecht Olsen12,14,15, Pedro Ordunez1.
Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) Global Hearts Initiative offers technical packages to reduce the burden of cardiovascular diseases through population-wide and targeted health services interventions. The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) has led implementation of the HEARTS in the Americas Initiative since 2016. The authors mapped the developmental stages, barriers, and facilitators to implementation among the 371 primary health care centers in the participating 12 countries. The authors used the qualitative method of document review to examine cumulative country reports, technical meeting notes, and reports to regional stakeholders. Common implementation barriers include segmentation of health systems, overcoming health care professionals' scope of practice legal restrictions, and lack of health information systems limiting operational evaluation and quality improvement mechanisms. Main implementation facilitators include political support from ministries of health and leading scientific societies, PAHO's role as a regional catalyst to implementation, stakeholder endorsement demonstrated by incorporating HEARTS into official documents, and having a health system oriented to primary health care. Key lessons include the need for political commitment and cultivating on-the-ground leadership to initiate a shift in hypertension care delivery, accompanied by specific progress in the development of standardized treatment protocols and a set of high-quality medicines. By systematizing an implementation strategy to ease integration of interventions into delivery processes, the program strengthened technical leadership and ensured sustainability. These study findings will aid the regional approach by providing a staged planning model that incorporates lessons learned. A systematic approach to implementation will enhance equity, efficiency, scale-up, and sustainability, and ultimately improve population hypertension control.Entities:
Keywords: Latin America and the Caribbean; cardiovascular disease; hypertension; implementation science; non-communicable diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33738969 PMCID: PMC8678790 DOI: 10.1111/jch.14157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) ISSN: 1524-6175 Impact factor: 3.738
FIGURE 1HEARTS in the Americas vision, technical pillars, and cross‐cutting implementation strategies
Number of primary health care centers implementing the HEARTS technical package and program coverage by countries, 2020
| Cohort | Country (Implementation starting year) | Numbers of HEARTS Implementing Primary Health Care Centers | Total population in catchment area | Adult population in the catchment area | Number of persons with hypertension in the registry | Coverage rate baseline | Coverage rate by March 2020 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| At baseline | At last evaluation | |||||||
| Cohort 1 | Barbados | 2 | 4 | 94 300 | ||||
| 2015 | ||||||||
| Colombia | 2 | 13 | 499 326 | 261 385 | 45 185 | 35% | 58% | |
| 2017 | ||||||||
| Chile | 2 | 79 | 1 850 970 | 1 446 624 | 185 759 | 48% | 46% | |
| 2017 | ||||||||
| Cuba | 1 | 20 | 565 499 | 401 056 | 65 832 | 52% | 69% | |
| 2017 | ||||||||
| Cohort 2 | Trinidad & Tobago | 5 | 14 | 381 041 | 238 051 | 12 527 | 31% | 33% |
| 2018 | ||||||||
| Ecuador | 10 | 30 | 662 448 | 412 265 | 7719 | 5% | 9% | |
| 2018 | ||||||||
| Argentina | 5 | 13 | 132 106 | 77 440 | 5602 | 22% | 21% | |
| 2018 | ||||||||
| Panamá | 7 | 37 | 570 994 | 630 195 | 52 872 | 21% | 38% | |
| 2018 | ||||||||
| Cohort 3 | Saint Lucia | 6 | 6 | 33 423 | 23 819 | 1406 | 19% | 21% |
| 2019 | ||||||||
| Peru | 34 | 34 | 720 597 | 486 058 | 7655 | 5% | 8% | |
| 2019 | ||||||||
| Dominican Republic | 26 | 18 | 70 296 | 41 169 | 5292 | 32% | 43% | |
| 2019 | ||||||||
| Mexico | 20 | 20 | 420 624 | 185 849 | 3606 | 10% | 8% | |
| 2019 | ||||||||
| Totals | 120 | 288 | 5 907 324 | 4 298 211 | 393 455 | |||
Source: Ministries of Health of corresponding countries.
Coverage: Percent of persons with hypertension in the registry and in pharmacological treatment based on the best estimate of prevalence for the catchment area.
FIGURE 2Nested multi‐level nature of HEARTS in the Americas
FIGURE 3The modified stages model shown in cyclic format; adapted from innovation to full scale, leading to sustainable impact at scale from the USAID, Supporting Country‐Led Efforts to Systematically Scale‐Up and Sustain Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, Child
FIGURE 4A cyclical, reiterative depiction of staged model of implementation occurring at every country implementing the HEARTS in the Americas Initiative
Summary of key lessons
| Theme | Lesson |
|---|---|
| Secure political support | The critical role of the MoH and the local authorities to implement and sustain a comprehensive program such as HEARTS in the Americas. MoH and the public health local authorities have the primary responsibility to manage and finance primary health care. |
| Shift health care provider roles | A paradigm shift is needed to change lead provider of CVD/ hypertension programs from the very specialized, secondary level of care to primary health care. Advocating for legislative changes to move away from physician‐centered to person‐centered health care, as well as training the new generation of leaders and health care staff to carry forward new roles and responsibilities. |
| Systematize implementation strategies | Systematizing the methodology of engagement, pre‐implementation, implementation, sustainment, and institutionalization facilitates the provision of technical assistance to each country following its stage of development within the continuum of adoption of HEARTS. |
| Provide strong technical leadership | Strong technical leadership is fundamental to engage, advise, and accompany the process of adoption. |
| Understand local organizational structures | Deep understanding of the culture, organizational structures of the health systems is prerequisites to interacting with the MoH. |
| Recruit and retain field champions | Recruiting strong recognized leaders—and upcoming new leaders—in the field of cardiovascular health, and forming strong alliances with scientific societies has proven an important ingredient to success. |
| Cultivate technical leadership | Cultivating in‐country technical leadership, particularly from underrepresented backgrounds (eg, class, race/ethnic, sex), is as important as obtaining and sustaining political will. |