|
|
Volume 5:
No. 3, July 2008
ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Strategies for Establishing Policy, Environmental, and Systems-Level Interventions for Managing High Blood Pressure and High Cholesterol in Health Care Settings: A Qualitative Case Study
Dyann Matson Koffman, DrPH, MPH, Sharon A. Granade, MPH, Victoria V. Anwuri, MPH
Suggested citation for this article: Matson Koffman D, Granade SA, Anwuri VV. Strategies for
establishing policy, environmental, and systems-level interventions for
managing high blood pressure and high cholesterol in health care settings: a
qualitative case study. Prev Chronic Dis 2008;5(3).
http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2008/ jul/07_0218.htm. Accessed [date].
PEER REVIEWED
Abstract
Introduction
Policy, environmental, and systems-level interventions are part of a comprehensive approach to managing high blood pressure and high cholesterol, which are key risk factors for heart disease and stroke. In this qualitative case study, we identified clinical practices in health care organizations that used policy, environmental, or systems-level interventions to improve patient outcomes for these conditions. Our
4 objectives were to describe 1) policy, environmental, and systems-level
interventions; 2) enabling factors and barriers that affected
implementation; 3) methods for evaluating the success of the intervention; and 4) lessons learned from the health care practices that implemented these interventions.
Methods
Through literature review and expert guidance, we identified 34 health care practices that used policy, environmental, and systems-level interventions to manage high blood pressure and high cholesterol. In 2003, we conducted case study interviews with key informants for
9 health care practices that 1) demonstrated improved patient outcomes for blood pressure or cholesterol; 2) implemented the interventions for at least 1 year; and 3) remained committed to sustaining or
institutionalizing interventions. We taped and transcribed the interviews and used Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention EZ-Text software (www.cdc.gov/hiv/software/ez-text.htm) to code, categorize, and analyze the responses.
Results
The health care practices we studied implemented
specialized lipid clinics, disease management programs, physician reminder
systems, and participation in the Health Resources and Services Administration’s Bureau of Primary Care Health Disparities Collaboratives.
All practices used comprehensive systems for patient care that were
well-defined, measurable, and linked to desirable patient outcomes. Most relied
on data systems to identify patients targeted for the interventions and practice areas that needed improvement, and
to track the progress of patients and practitioners in meeting goals. Factors contributing to success included support for patient self-management, interventions integrated into the practice’s daily work flow to make
implementation easier for staff, leadership and staff commitment, and community involvement.
Conclusion
Comprehensive policy, environmental, and systems-level interventions for patient care can be effective in controlling chronic conditions such as high blood pressure and high cholesterol.
Back to top
Introduction
Coronary heart disease and stroke are the first and third leading causes of death in the United States (1) and major causes of disability (1,2). The American Heart Association and the American Stroke Association estimate that the total direct and indirect cost of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the United States in 2007 was $438 billion (2). Much of the burden of heart disease and stroke could be eliminated by preventing or reducing
7 major risk factors — high blood pressure, high
cholesterol, obesity, tobacco use, diabetes, physical inactivity, and poor diet (3,4). For example, a reduction in systolic blood pressure of 12 to 13
mm Hg over 4 years of follow-up can reduce heart attacks by 21%, strokes by 37%, and all deaths from coronary vascular disease by 25% (5). Furthermore, a 10% decrease in total cholesterol may reduce the incidence of coronary heart disease by as much as 30% (6,7). However, only an estimated 31% of adults with high blood pressure (8) and 18% of
those with high cholesterol (9) have these conditions under control. The 2004 estimated prevalence of high blood pressure at or above 140/90 mm Hg in U.S. adults aged 20 and older was 33.6%, and total cholesterol at or above 200 mg/dL was 48.4% (2). The
Healthy People 2010 targets are to reduce the proportion of adults with high blood pressure to 16% and to lower the proportion of adults
with elevated total cholesterol to 17% (10).
Why is it such a challenge to prevent and control high blood pressure and high cholesterol? The literature cites many reasons (11-15). Some articles focus on patient-related factors, such as noncompliance with treatment regimens because of medication side effects, complexity of the drug regimen(s), and lack of awareness of the need for long-term therapy (11-13). Others focus on the failure of physicians to consistently comply with evidence-based guidelines (14). According to Wagner, Austin,
and Von Korff, clinical practices are not structured to adequately care for patients with chronic conditions (15):
Medical practices, especially those in primary care, are generally organized to respond to the acute and urgent needs of their patients, or symptom-relieving treatments. . . . This leaves little time or intellectual energy for addressing the less urgent, but nevertheless predictable, needs of patients with chronic illness in managing their conditions and preventing deleterious sequelae.
Policy, environmental, and systems-level (PES) interventions constitute a paradigm shift in clinical care from earlier health care models and represent an ecological model that links PES changes with behavior changes at the individual level to prevent heart disease and stroke (16-18). Policy interventions include laws, regulations, and formal and informal rules adopted within specific organizations (19). For example, health care organizations can have treatment policies to implement
evidence-based national clinical guidelines such as those of the Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure
(JNC 7) (20); the Third Report of the Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (ATP III Final Report) (21); and the 2002 update to the American Heart Association
(AHA) guidelines (22) and the 2001 update to the AHA/American College of Cardiology
guidelines (23).
Environmental interventions are changes to the economic, social, or physical environments (19). Examples include making community resources available and known to the public and creating an environment that allows people to make healthier choices.
Systems-level interventions are changes affecting the way an organizational system operates. Within the health care setting, these interventions generally focus on changing the ways in which health services are delivered and may include delegating responsibility for key care functions to nonphysician members of the health care practice, putting systems in place to ensure appropriate follow-up with patients, and providing regular feedback to physicians on how well they manage their
patients’ conditions (24).
A 1996 literature review (15) examined comprehensive approaches to reorganizing the delivery of care to improve the outcomes of patients with chronic illness. The review’s authors noted that successful interventions shared the following elements: 1) explicit protocols based on evidence-based guidelines; 2) practice organization to meet the needs of patients who require more time, a broad array of resources, and closer follow-up; 3) systematic attention to providing patients with
information for behavioral change; 4) ready access to necessary expertise; and 5) supportive information systems (15). These elements, which also could be considered PES interventions, are reflected in Edward H. Wagner’s Chronic Care Model (25). This model for improving the care of patients with chronic disease has essential elements grouped in
6 areas: 1) the community (resources and policies), 2) the health care system (organization of health care), 3) support for patient
self-management, 4) design for delivering health services to patients, 5) support for physician decisions, and 6) clinical information systems.
In a 1997 review of interventions to prevent cardiopulmonary disorders among patients in health care settings, Ockene et al (26) concluded that traditional education and training programs for health care providers combined with reminders systems, feedback to providers, and practice guidelines are most effective for delivering preventive interventions. They also found that the effectiveness of providers is optimized when the intervention uses a team of both nonphysicians and physicians to
counsel patients on prevention and when providers support the control of risk factors through multiple patient visits, follow-up telephone calls to the patient, or referrals to specialists as appropriate.
We have identified other promising quasi-experimental or experimental studies published from 1997 through 2007 describing interventions in health care settings that contribute to preventing and controlling high blood pressure, high cholesterol, heart disease, and stroke (14,20-23,27-72). Elements of interventions that showed improvement in outcomes for high blood pressure or high cholesterol included 1) providers that adhere to standardized protocols that are consistent with
evidence-based national guidelines (20-23,28-44); 2) multidisciplinary clinical care teams that deliver elements of quality patient care, such as routine and consistent screening, assessment, counseling, and patient follow-up contacts, to control risk factors (32,33,38,45-48); 3) treatment and prevention clinics that deliver focused management of care (31,33-37,49-54); 4) electronic medical record systems, automatic prescription systems, and paper and electronic reminder systems for health
care providers (14,55-63); and 5) patient education (61,62,65-71). National treatment guidelines recommend that clinical prevention and treatment services include these
5 elements (54,55,58,59,63,64,68,71).
Purpose of study
The purpose of our case study was to identify and describe promising health care practices (PHPs) and the PES interventions these practices used to control high blood pressure and high cholesterol. We defined a PHP as one that had practice-based data showing positive outcomes from interventions to reduce risk factors related to heart disease and stroke but whose data may not yet have been tested in controlled studies to allow for generalizable results (16). We also identified the
strategies that led to successful adoption and implementation of these PES interventions, the methods used to evaluate progress, and lessons learned.
Back to top
Methods
We searched peer-reviewed literature databases (ABI/Inform, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Lexis/Nexis, New York, New York; OVID, New York, New York; and the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed, Bethesda, Maryland) for articles published from 1992 through 2003 to identify studies of PES
interventions in health care settings that were focused on the prevention of
heart disease and stroke. We also used Google (www.google.com) to identify practices implementing PES interventions that had
received special recognition, such as the C. Everett Koop award for exemplary health care programs. In addition, we selected a variety of experts from among participants in national conferences and our own professional contacts, including staff from state health departments, representatives from business groups and health associations, and researchers, to identify PHPs that were using PES interventions. The search generated 644 studies of PHPs that used PES interventions. We narrowed the list
to 34 studies that reported all 3 of the following: 1) data on improved patient outcomes in the control of blood pressure (<140/90 mm Hg) and cholesterol (<200 mg/dL for total cholesterol or <100 mg/dL for low-density lipoprotein
cholesterol [LDL]), 2) incorporation of the interventions for at least 1 year, and 3) organizational commitment to sustaining or institutionalizing the interventions. We made initial phone calls to gather information if it was not publicly available and then used the
following criteria to rank and select 9 of the 34 PHPs: 1) use of a control or
comparison group in the study, 2) outcomes that were statistically or
clinically significant, 3) incorporation of national JNC 7 (20) and ATP III (21) guidelines, and 4) study populations
that were at high risk for heart disease and stroke. Using in-depth telephone interviews, we conducted a case study with key informants (physicians, other health-care practitioners, and administrators) of the
9 PHPs selected in
order to identify and learn about the factors and strategies that worked for establishing the PES interventions (73).
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) taped and transcribed the
interviews and used CDC EZ-Text software (provided free at www.cdc.gov/hiv/software/ez-text.htm) to code,
categorize, and analyze responses to the interviews.
The 9 PHPs were the Laurel Health System’s CVD Collaborative (Wellsboro, Pennsylvania); Health Management Corporation (Richmond, Virginia) for Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) of Delaware (Wilmington, Delaware); Kaiser Permanente (Cleveland, Ohio); Mayo Clinic’s Division of Community Internal Medicine (Rochester, Minnesota); Robeson Healthcare Corporation’s CVD Collaborative (Lumberton, North Carolina); Midwest Heart Specialists (Chicago and
Rockford, Illinois); MVP Health Care (Schenectady, New York, and Williston, Vermont); Drug Therapy Management,
Inc (Pharmacist-Managed Lipid Clinic, Greensboro, North Carolina); and Partners for Better Health of Health Partners (Minneapolis, Minnesota).
Back to top
Results
The Table summarizes the PES interventions implemented in each of the
9 PHPs included in our study, and we describe the study design and reported patient outcomes in the
Appendix. Four of the practices also reported
their outcome data for high blood pressure and high cholesterol control in 5
studies in peer-reviewed journals (32,33,54,55,64).
Key informants described the interventions in their PHPs, including 1) factors leading to their implementation, 2) models used in their design, 3) patient outcomes, 4) strategies for measuring progress, 5) costs, and 6) lessons learned.
Factors leading to interventions
The primary reasons PHPs gave for implementing the interventions were the realization and concern
that patients’ lipid concentrations (especially LDL cholesterol) or blood pressures were not adequately controlled, as judged
by using national guidelines (e.g., JNC 7 [20], ATP III [21]), and that the compliance of practice providers with these guidelines was inconsistent. This realization often stemmed from reviewing patient charts and evaluating
the way health care was delivered within the informants’ organizations. Key informants reported that some practitioners admitted that before they analyzed their patient charts, they had believed they were adequately following guidelines to help patients manage their conditions and were surprised to find they were not.
Some key informants said the frequent diagnoses of heart disease within their patient population and the related costly procedures led their organization to implement PES interventions. Other informants said they were influenced by data in the literature reporting on the U.S. burden of heart disease and the positive outcomes from PES interventions, particularly for reducing risk factors such as high cholesterol and high blood pressure. Informants from
2 PHPs mentioned that their decision
to implement interventions was influenced by changes in the health care commercial market, particularly the move toward managed care, combined with their need to stay competitive. Practitioners in some PHPs introduced interventions that would help them more efficiently manage CVD
in patients without adversely affecting the time spent on other responsibilities. Communities were the impetus behind some of the interventions. For example, a community group in Pennsylvania identified diabetes and CVD
as major health problems in its community; because of the group's commitment to reducing the impact of these diseases in the community,
it worked with the Laurel Health System to spearhead and move its diabetes and cardiovascular collaboratives forward.
Descriptions of the interventions
Key informants described a wide array of PES interventions that had been implemented in their organizations, all of which were based on nationally recognized guidelines and best practices. The primary types of interventions implemented were automated physician reminder systems, specialized lipid clinics, collaboratives, and disease management programs
(described below). The goals of the interventions centered on providing physicians with the tools to adequately treat patients with high
blood pressure or high cholesterol, empowering patients with the skills to manage their conditions, achieving the goals referenced in the national guidelines, and, ultimately, preventing complications related to CVD.
Automated physician reminder systems integrated into electronic medical
records
Kaiser Permanente, Ohio, integrated physician reminders into its electronic medical records system to support physician decision making at the time of each patient visit. This made it easier for physicians to access patient data during the visit, to be alerted when a patient’s cholesterol or blood pressure was uncontrolled, to determine when testing for lipids or other purposes should be performed, and to adjust medications as needed.
Specialized lipid clinics
Two PHPs used specialized lipid clinics to manage their patients’ cholesterol and triglyceride values. Lipid clinics provide patient-focused care to educate patients and to assist them in setting self-management goals for changes in lifestyle. In addition, these clinics track patient status as measured by cholesterol values, medications prescribed, patient compliance with medication regimens, follow-up visits, and other factors that determine
whether comprehensive care is being offered.
Some clinics also adjust medications based on evidence-based algorithms and the approval of the physician. Midwest Heart Specialists established a physician-directed lipid clinic that nurses managed for some patients with high cholesterol. The results of this lipid clinic were so impressive (54) that the practice developed a virtual lipid clinic
accessible to all providers that incorporated the process used in the nurse-managed clinic into an electronic record system with a
cholesterol management tool (55). The development of the virtual lipid clinic enabled patients from throughout the practice to benefit from this intervention. Drug Therapy Management, Inc, a pharmacist-managed lipid clinic contracted with a cardiology clinic, also reported successful patient outcomes (33).
Collaboratives
A collaborative is an integrated and collaborative national effort to eliminate disparities and improve health
care delivery systems. Collaboratives are designed to help health care organizations improve the care of their patients with CVD and other chronic diseases. Collaboratives promote evidence-based health care strategies for quality improvement based on the Chronic Care Model and on the Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles described below (74). They also emphasize sharing experiences
among participating organizations to enable them to learn from one another. Three PHPs participated in a collaborative. Mayo Clinic’s Division of Community Internal Medicine in Minnesota participated in a collaborative sponsored by the Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement (ICSI)
(www.icsi.org/). As part of this collaborative, this PHP implemented the ICSI Guidelines (75) for blood pressure control, which are based on JNC-VI
Guidelines (76), and redesigned
the system by which nurses and medical assistants screened and managed patient blood pressure. Robeson Healthcare Corporation and Laurel Health System implemented the Prevention of Diabetic and Cardiovascular Disease Collaborative of the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA’s) Bureau of Primary Care Health Disparities Collaboratives
(www.healthdisparities.net/hdc/html/collaborativesOverview.aspx).
Disease management programs
Three PHPs (Partners for Better Health of Health Partners, MVP Health Care, Health Management Corporation/BCBS of Delaware) described their disease management programs for proactive, comprehensive management of their patients with CVD. Disease management programs, which are disease-specific, provide care
by using such strategies as population identification processes, evidence-based practice guidelines, collaborative practice models that include both physicians and providers of support
services, patient self-management and education, measurements of process and outcomes, evaluation and management, and routine reporting and feedback loops (77).
Health models used for designing interventions
Four of the 9 PHPs incorporated the Chronic Care Model along with PDSA cycles for quality improvement when designing their PES interventions. PDSA cycles rely on simple measurements to monitor the effect of small changes over time, which then can build into larger improvements through successive quick cycles of change. Although informants for the other
5 PHPs did not explicitly mention using the Chronic Care Model, their interventions often contained some of this model’s
elements, such as use of protocols based on evidence-based guidelines, reorganization of health care delivery, use of clinical information systems, and support for patient self-management.
Two PHPs (Partners for Better Health of Health Partners and Health Management Corporation/BCBS of Delaware) modeled their patient support components according to where patients were on the health continuum:
One model that we’ve used is a model of the health continuum [that] describes what we’re trying to do with health improvement, and it goes from keeping people from advancing into stages of disease. So we look at our programs from primary prevention all the way through the care of the [patient] population with the highest risk and mortality.
(informant, Partners for Better Health of Health Partners)
Such a model is patient-focused and approaches health promotion and prevention of risk factors at all stages of disease. Along these lines, some PHPs used nurses to regularly interact with patients via telephone or other avenues to offer education and support.
Some interventions were modeled after existing programs that had proven successful. For example, MVP Health Care implemented a CVD management program patterned after other programs already in place for its patients with asthma and diabetes.
Patient outcome data
Patient outcome data for these PES interventions are limited to responses from the interviews with key informants (see Appendix) and the
5 studies reported in peer-reviewed journals (32,33,54,55,64). Informants from all PHPs reported that their interventions were very successful at increasing providers’ compliance with guidelines and in increasing the percentage of patients
who met their cholesterol or blood pressure goals, complied with medication regimens, or
set and
achieved goals for self-management. Informants also reported improvements in the delivery of health care, which led to an increase in the consistency and quality of patient care and more productive use of providers’ time.
Some informants reported that these improvements decreased utilization of various forms of health care, such as inpatient admissions and emergency room visits,
and resulted in significant cost savings to health care plans.
Measuring progress
Informants from the PHPs noted that they measured varying combinations of outcomes and processes for quality improvement. The indicators that the programs used to measure the various PES
interventions are described below. Many informants stated that the organization
must first agree on its definition of success:
Critical in our start was that we had to come to a common definition of success . . . not only
[to] define success, but also [to] measure success. And that was coming to agreement on the different . . . outcomes measures, process measures, and end results that would define our success for everyone. So that we were all . . . going after the same goals.
(Informant, Health Management Corporation/BCBS of Delaware)
Outcomes measures
Among the patient outcome measures PHPs reported were monitoring control of lipids, glucose, and blood pressure among patients at risk and patients achieving self-management goals, such as weight loss, smoking cessation, and participation in regular exercise. Some PHPs also evaluated use of aspirin, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, and beta-blockers in patients with heart disease. Many PHPs also measured utilization rates for health care, such as emergency room visits,
hospitalizations, and the pharmacy. In addition, Partners for Better Health of Health Partners monitored the percentage of patients who had all modifiable risk factors managed optimally. Drug Therapy Management,
Inc, monitored the number of recurrent cardiovascular events, and Midwest Heart Specialists calculated the number of cardiovascular events prevented or lives saved.
Process measures
Process measures included measuring physicians’ compliance with policies and guidelines, patients’ compliance with medications and plans of care, and the percentage of patients screened for abnormal lipids, blood pressure, glucose, and glycosylated hemoglobin. PHPs that incorporated PDSA cycles conducted mini-studies to evaluate the effectiveness of each step of the intervention. For example, as part of redesigning the way it delivered patient care, Mayo Clinic
delegated responsibility to licensed practical nurses (LPNs) and medical assistants (MAs) for taking patients’ blood pressure and referring patients with elevated values for a follow-up visit with a registered nurse. Before delegating this responsibility to the LPNs and MAs, the clinic first monitored the number of times the LPN or MA successfully recognized high blood pressure and made the referral.
Choosing measures
Informants for some PHPs explained how they chose measures and why they chose to evaluate certain ones. They chose measures they believed would help them improve the quality of care for patients, decrease expenses, or have the most impact on health outcomes. Often they chose to evaluate measures to help them comply with standards set by organizations such as the National Committee for Quality Assurance, HRSA’s
Bureau of Primary Health Care, or the National Cholesterol Education Program:
We felt that we could make the most impact on the lipid profile, so we chose the lipid one [as an optional parameter to measure].
(informant, Robeson Healthcare Corporation)
Information systems
Most PHPs used information technology systems to continuously monitor selected measures and to provide regular feedback to health care practitioners, organization management, or HRSA’s Bureau of Primary Health Care (Health Disparities Collaboratives). The feedback showed areas in need of improvement
and indicated whether goals were achieved. The PHPs subsequently used the
feedback to make improvements in various components of the intervention. One PHP informant described the use of statistical process
control (SPC) to evaluate which processes needed improvement:
Using SPC, you could tell if some of the measures were basically more than
2 standard deviations from the desired goal. In which case, in SPC terminology, that means you need to change your processes.
(informant, Kaiser Permanente, Ohio)
Barriers to measurements
PHPs encountered some difficulties in measuring progress or success of interventions. Among these were a lack of resources for gathering necessary data, goals that proved too ambitious, and variation in physician behavior. Informants said they sometimes had problems with their computer systems. Some said that entering new patient data skewed all previously entered measurement data, making it difficult to evaluate improvements over time. They also said the lack of standardized codes for
laboratory tests or other procedures sometimes made it difficult to merge data from different sources.
Costs of interventions
When asked to estimate the financial costs of their PES interventions, PHP informants sometimes had difficulty assigning a total monetary value to the interventions. This was because many components of the interventions were phased in over a period of time, and others were incorporated into regular staff duties:
It’s really hard to answer that because it [the intervention] becomes part of everybody’s work and it becomes embedded into the activities across the entire spectrum of the organization.
(informant, Partners for Better Health of Health Partners)
The costs of interventions included personnel time and resources devoted to planning and goal setting, implementation of the interventions, and ongoing activities to sustain the interventions. Some interventions involved significant time and effort for many people throughout the organization, often incurring substantial expenditures as measured by decreased time to devote to other services.
One informant described the many variables that could affect the cost of setting up a lipid clinic:
The [lipid] clinic costs are dependent on how they [are] set up. . . .
The cost of putting in a system depends on what you're doing. If you’re putting in a paper system, it costs almost nothing. If you put in a computer system, it can cost several thousand dollars per physician.
(informant, Midwest Heart Specialists)
Some PHPs attempted to estimate the cost for certain components of their interventions. For example, the costs ranged from $10,000 to $15,000 for a pharmacy-managed lipid clinic to $700,000 for an automated medical records system with physician reminders for a patient population of
approximately 300,000. Robeson Healthcare Corporation expressed the opinion that interventions were worth the cost if they ultimately prevented heart attacks, strokes, and intensive hospitalizations. Midwest Heart
Specialists developed a virtual computer-based lipid clinic to help reduce costs associated with its more intensive nurse-managed lipid clinic.
Some informants said that the PES interventions, once implemented, actually increased productivity and freed up time for physicians and other staff. For some interventions, the costs were offset by help from other resources. For example, some PHPs received funds through special funding grants for intervention start-up costs. Health insurance companies enabled other interventions by reimbursing intervention services or by allowing their members to have access to intervention programs. Because
of their proven success with interventions, some PHPs have been able to negotiate better health insurance reimbursement rates for intervention-related services.
Lessons learned and recommendations
Key informants from the PHPs offered numerous recommendations to those interested in implementing similar interventions.
Design and implementation of interventions
- Generate awareness of the intervention among the staff, community (when applicable), and other stakeholders.
- Assure that all the stakeholders’ visions for the intervention program are in alignment.
- Plan and organize details of the implementation, including resources that will be needed.
- Develop a system for the performance of work processes and integrate these processes into the work flow for delivering health services. Coordinate the operations among all the departments in the organization that will be involved with the interventions.
- Start small and persist; do not let desire for perfection be a stumbling block.
- Plan to sustain the interventions, which should include ongoing training for the staff.
Staffing
- Get the right people on the health care team:
Pick people [who] are interested and enthusiastic to start with; don’t go for your toughest nuts first.
(informant, Mayo Clinic)
- Interact with staff and other key players to communicate how the protocols will work.
- Listen to and understand the needs of staff involved in implementing the interventions.
- Delegate work responsibilities to members of the health care team:
Get everyone on the team working at their maximum level. (informant, Mayo Clinic)
Patient focus
- Provide patient education with a focus on changing behaviors:
It’s really working with people where they are and moving them along the continuum from inaction to actually taking action.
(informant, Health Management Corporation/BCBS)
- Foster relationships with patients:
[B]ecause it doesn’t matter if you’re really intelligent; if you can’t communicate well with the patient and be congenial, friendly, and likable, then it’s not going to work well. The patient is not going to follow what you say. I think that’s what has helped patients be compliant, is having someone that’s very caring and really concerned about them.
(informant, Drug Therapy Management, Inc)
Back to top
Discussion
On the basis of these case studies and reported outcome data, we concluded
that practices that use comprehensive systems of patient care can be effective in controlling high blood pressure and high cholesterol. The PES
interventions included 1) automated physician reminder systems, 2) specialized lipid clinics, 3) collaboratives, and 4) disease management programs. The common thread for these interventions is that they all incorporated comprehensive systems for patient care with processes that were well-defined,
measurable, and linked to desirable patient outcomes. Most relied on data systems to identify patients targeted for the interventions and areas in need of improvement and to track progress. Most of them also included elements of the Chronic Care Model, and some said they used PDSA cycles to measure the effectiveness of each step of change.
Factors critical to success of interventions included support for patient self-management and education, interventions integrated easily into the daily work flow to make it easier for staff to implement them, and leadership and staff commitment. Other important factors included involving staff throughout the organization and community groups in the planning and implementation stages, effective communication with health care providers and other staff,
having ongoing training of staff, and keeping
the intervention project high on the agenda so that motivation for sustaining it would not be lost. Many of the key informants also noted the importance of enlisting the right people to be on the intervention team.
These PES interventions may not be applicable to all health care settings.
Indeed, we note that the 9 PHPs we studied were often affiliated with larger health care plans that could afford these sometimes costly interventions. Smaller health care practices may
not have the necessary resources.
Limitations and strengths of the case method
Although most of the PHPs studied relied on noncontrolled evaluations, 4 of them used experimental or quasi-experimental designs to evaluate the PES interventions.
Although all of the information and data for this article
were gathered through an interview process, 4 of the practices also reported their outcome data for high blood pressure and high cholesterol control in
5 studies in the peer-reviewed literature (32,33,54,55,64). We identified common factors among the PHPs
that contributed to their success in implementing the interventions, but this information was based on only
9 practices. Furthermore, our case method did not allow us to determine which PES interventions or combinations of interventions were most effective. We recommend a meta-analysis of PES interventions in the literature.
Recommendations
Further research is needed to evaluate the effectiveness of various PES interventions and to determine how smaller health care practices can adopt them. In addition, research is needed to determine the actual costs of putting these systems in place and their impact on improving health conditions. Many informants were not aware of the total costs of implementation. Health care executives may be hesitant to initiate similar interventions in their practices if the return on investment is
uncertain. Studies are also needed to determine whether PES interventions can sustain positive patient outcomes, avert or delay heart disease or stroke, and improve patients’ health, quality of life, and productivity.
Conclusion
The 9 PHPs we studied that used and institutionalized PES interventions for at least a year reported positive outcomes for controlling high blood pressure and high cholesterol. We are among the first to use case studies to synthesize the practical experiences, lessons learned, and recommendations of PHPs using a variety of PES interventions. These results verify the value of PES interventions reported in the literature, and they have important implications for clinicians and for policy
makers. The results show clinicians that certain strategies and factors are critical for establishing comprehensive systems of care, which can lead to positive patient outcomes. Policy makers may want to consider initiatives that require health care practices to adopt these systems of care.
Back to top
Acknowledgments
This project was approved by the CDC Internal Review Board, Protocol #3116.
Back to top
Author Information
Corresponding Author: Dyann Matson Koffman, DrPH, MPH, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, 4770 Buford Hwy, NE, Mailstop K-47, Atlanta, GA 30341. Telephone: 770-488-8002. E-mail: dfm1@cdc.gov.
Author Information: Sharon A. Granade, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
National Center for Preparedness, Detection, and Control of Infectious
Diseases, Atlanta, Georgia; Victoria V. Anwuri, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Diabetes Initiative National Program Office, St. Louis, Missouri. (At the time
of this study, Ms Anwuri was affiliated with the Association of Schools of Public Health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Atlanta, Georgia).
Back to top
References
- Health, United States, 2006, with chartbook on trends in the health of Americans. Hyattsville (MD): National Center for Health Statistics.
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hus/hus06.pdf. Accessed April 17, 2008.
- Heart disease and stroke statistics — 2007 update. Dallas (TX): American Heart Association; 2006.
- Stamler J, Stamler R, Neaton JD, Wentworth D, Daviglus ML, Garside D, et
al
Low risk-factor profile and long-term cardiovascular and noncardiovascular
mortality and life expectancy: findings for 5 large cohorts of young adult
and middle-aged men and women. JAMA 1999;282(21):2012-8.
- Greenland P, Knoll MD, Stamler J, Neaton JD, Dyer AR, Garside DB, et al
Major risk factors as antecedents of fatal and nonfatal coronary heart disease events. JAMA 2003;290(7):891-7.
- He J, Whelton PK.
Elevated systolic blood pressure and risk of cardiovascular and renal disease: overview of evidence from observational epidemiologic studies and randomized controlled trials. Am Heart J 1999;138(3
Pt 2):211-9.
- Cohen JD.
A population-based approach to cholesterol control. Am J Med 1997;102(2A):23-5.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
State-specific cholesterol screening trends—United States, 1991–1999. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2000;49(33):750-5.
- Hajjar I, Kotchen TA.
Trends in prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension in the United States, 1988–2000. JAMA 2003;290(2):199-206.
- Ford ES, Mokdad AH, Giles WH, Mensah GA.
Serum total cholesterol concentrations and awareness, treatment, and control of hypercholesterolemia among U.S. adults: findings from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1999 to 2000. Circulation 2003;107(17):2185-9.
- Healthy People 2010: heart disease and stroke. Atlanta (GA): Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. http://www.healthypeople.gov/Document/HTML/ Volume1/12Heart.htm#_Toc490544220. Accessed April 17, 2008.
- Rudd P, Miller NH, Kaufman J, Kraemer HC, Bandura A, Greenwald G, et al
Nurse management for hypertension. A systems approach. Am J Hypertens 2004;17(10):921-7.
- Friedman RH, Kazis LE, Jette A, Smith MB, Stollerman J, Torgerson J, et al
A telecommunications system for monitoring and counseling patients with hypertension.
Impact on medication adherence and blood pressure control. Am J
Hypertens 1996;9(4 Pt 1):285-92.
- McKenney JM, Munroe WP, Wright JT Jr.
Impact of an electronic medication compliance aid on long-term blood pressure control. J Clin Pharmacol 1992;32(3):277-83.
- Ornstein S, Jenkins RG, Nietert PJ, Feifer C, Roylance LF, Nemeth L, et al
A multimethod quality improvement intervention to improve preventive cardiovascular care: a cluster randomized trial. Ann Intern Med 2004;141(7):523-32.
- Wagner EH, Austin BT, Von Korff M.
Organizing care for patients with chronic illness. Milbank Q 1996;74(4):511-44.
- Matson Koffman DM, Goetzel RZ, Anwuri VV, Shore KK, Orenstein D, LaPier T.
Heart healthy and stroke free: successful business strategies to prevent cardiovascular disease. Am J Prev Med 2005;29(5 Suppl 1):113-21.
- Bodenheimer T, Wagner EH, Grumbach K.
Improving primary care for patients with chronic illness: the chronic care model, Part 2. JAMA 2002;288(15):1909-14.
- McLeroy KR, Bibeau D, Steckler A, Glanz K.
An ecological perspective on health promotion programs. Health Educ Q 1988;15(4):351-77.
- Policy and environmental change: new directions for public health — final report.
Washington (DC): Association of State and Territorial Directors of Health
Promotion and Public Health Education, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention; 2001. http://www.activelivingbydesign.org/fileadmin/template/ documents/Policy_EnvChange_ASTDHPPHE.pdf. Accessed April 17, 2008.
- Chobanian AV, Bakris GL, Black HR, Cushman WC, Green LA, Izzo JL Jr, et al
The
seventh report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure: the JNC 7 report.
[Published erratum in: JAMA 2003;290(2):197]. JAMA 2003;289(19):2560-72.
- Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood
Cholesterol in Adults.
Executive summary of the third report of the National Cholesterol Education
Program (NCEP) Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High
Blood Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment Panel III). JAMA 2001;285(19):2486-97.
- Pearson TA, Blair SN, Daniels SR, Eckel RH, Fair JM, Fortmann SP, et al
AHA
guidelines for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease and stroke: 2002
update: consensus panel guide to comprehensive risk reduction for adult
patients without coronary or other atherosclerotic vascular diseases.
American Heart Association Science Advisory and Coordinating Committee. Circulation 2002;106(3):388-91.
- Smith SC Jr, Blair SN, Bonow RO, Brass LM, Cerqueira MD, Dracup K, et al
AHA/ACC scientific statement: AHA/ACC guidelines for preventing heart attack
and death in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease: 2001
update: a statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart
Association and the American College of Cardiology. Circulation 2001;104(13):1577-9.
- Healthy People 2010: access to quality health services. Atlanta (GA): Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. http://www.healthypeople.gov/document/HTML/volume1/01Access.htm. Accessed April 17, 2008.
- The chronic care model. Seattle (WA): Improving Chronic Illness Care.
http://www.improvingchroniccare.org/index.php?p=The_Chronic_Care_Model&s=2. Accessed April 17, 2008.
- Ockene JK, McBride PE, Sallis JF, Bonollo DP, Ockene IS. Synthesis of lessons learned from cardiopulmonary preventive interventions in healthcare practice setting. Ann Epidemiol 1997;7(Suppl):S32-45.
- Anwuri VV, Matson-Koffman DM. Systems-level interventions for high blood pressure and high blood cholesterol control and prevention: a review of effective strategies in healthcare settings. Proceeding of the American Public Health Association 131st Annual Meeting and Exposition.
2003 Nov 17-19; San Francisco, CA.
- U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. Guide to clinical preventive services.
2nd ed. McLean (VA): International Medical Publishing; 1996.
http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/cpsix.htm. Accessed April 17, 2008.
- U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. Guide to clinical preventive services,
2001-2004. 3rd ed. Rockville (MD): U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2005.
http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/gcpspu.htm#top. Accessed April 17, 2008.
- O’Connor PJ, Quiter ES, Rush WA, Wiest M, Meland JT, Ryu S.
Impact of hypertension guideline implementation on blood pressure control and drug use in primary care clinics. Jt Comm J Qual Improv 1999;25(2):68-77.
- Borenstein JE, Graber G, Saltiel E, Wallace J, Ryu S, Archi J, et al
Physician-pharmacist comanagement of hypertension: a randomized, comparative trial. Pharmacotherapy 2003;23(2):209-16.
- Stroebel RJ, Broers JK, Houle SK, Scott CG, Naessens JM.
Improving hypertension control: a team approach in a primary care setting. Jt Comm J Qual Improv 2000;26(11):623-32.
- Bozovich M, Rubino CM, Edmunds J.
Effect of a clinical pharmacist-managed lipid clinic on achieving National Cholesterol Education Program low-density lipoprotein goals. Pharmacotherapy 2000;20(11):1375-83.
- Shaffer J, Wexler LF.
Reducing low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels in an ambulatory care system. Results of a multidisciplinary collaborative practice lipid clinic compared with traditional physician-based care. Arch Intern Med 1995;155(21):2330-5.
- Vivian EM.
Improving blood pressure control in a pharmacist-managed hypertension clinic. Pharmacotherapy 2002;22(12):1533-40.
- Solomon DK, Portner TS, Bass GE, Gourley DR, Gourley GA, Holt JM, et al
Clinical and economic outcomes in the hypertension and COPD arms of a multicenter outcomes study. J Am Pharm Assoc (Wash) 1998;38(5):574-85.
- Bogden PE, Koontz LM, Williamson P, Abbott RD.
The physician and pharmacist team. An effective approach to cholesterol reduction. J Gen Intern Med 1997;12(3):158-64.
- Ellis SL, Carter BL, Malone DC, Billups SJ, Okano GJ, Valuck RJ, et al
Clinical and economic impact of ambulatory care clinical pharmacists in management of dyslipidemia in older adults: the IMPROVE study. Impact of Managed Pharmaceutical Care on Resource Utilization and Outcomes in Veterans Affairs Medical Centers. Pharmacotherapy 2000;20(12):1508-16.
- Avanzini F, Corsetti A, Maglione T, Alli C, Colombo F, Torri V, et al
Simple, shared guidelines raise the quality of antihypertensive treatment in routine care. Am Heart J 2002;144(4):726-32.
- New JP, Mason JM, Freemantle N, Teasdale S, Wong LM, Bruce NJ, et al
Specialist nurse-led intervention to treat and control hypertension and
hyperlipidemia in diabetes (SPLINT): a randomized controlled trial.
Diabetes Care 2003;26(8):2250-5.
- Hill MN, Han HR, Dennison CR, Kim MT, Roary MC, Blumenthal RS, et al
Hypertension care and control in underserved urban African American men:
behavioral and physiologic outcomes at 36 months. Am J Hypertens
2003;16(11 Pt 1):906-13.
- Ditusa L, Luzier AB, Brady PG, Reinhardt RM, Snyder BD.
A pharmacy-based approach to cholesterol management. Am J Manag Care
2001;7(10):973-9.
- Kiessling A, Henriksson P.
Efficacy of case method learning in general practice for secondary
prevention in patients with coronary artery disease: randomised controlled
study. BMJ 2002;325(7369):877-80.
- Goldstein MK, Lavori P, Coleman R, Advani A, Hoffman BB.
Improving adherence to guidelines for hypertension drug prescribing: cluster-randomized controlled trial of general versus patient-specific recommendations.
Am J Manag Care 2005;11(11):677-85.
- Moher M, Yudkin P, Wright L, Turner R, Fuller A, Schofield T, et al
Cluster randomised controlled trial to compare three methods of promoting secondary prevention of coronary heart disease in primary care. BMJ 2001;322(7298):1338.
- Ho PM, Masoudi FA, Peterson ED, Grunwald GK, Sales AE, Hammermeister KE,
et al
Cardiology management improves secondary prevention measures among patients with coronary artery disease. J Am Coll Cardiol
2004;43(9):1517-23.
- Asch SM, Baker DW, Keesey JW, Broder M, Schonlau M, Rosen M, et al
Does the collaborative model improve care for chronic heart failure? Med Care
2005;43(7):667-75.
- Becker DM, Yanek LR, Johnson WR Jr, Garrett D, Moy TF, Reynolds SS, et al
Impact of a community-based multiple risk factor intervention on cardiovascular risk in black families with a history of premature coronary disease. Circulation
2005;111(10):1298-304.
- Bogden PE, Abbott RD, Williamson P, Onopa JK, Koontz LM.
Comparing standard care with a physician and pharmacist team approach for uncontrolled hypertension. J Gen Intern Med
1998;13(11):740-5.
- Erickson SR, Slaughter R, Halapy H.
Pharmacists’ ability to influence outcomes of hypertension therapy. Pharmacotherapy 1997;17(1):140-7.
- Zillich AJ, Sutherland JM, Kumbera PA, Carter BL.
Hypertension outcomes through blood pressure monitoring and evaluation by
pharmacists (HOME study). J Gen Intern Med 2005;20(12):1091-6.
- Denver EA, Barnard M, Woolfson RG, Earle KA.
Management of uncontrolled hypertension in a nurse-led clinic compared with conventional care for patients with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Care
2003;26(8):2256-60.
- Okamoto MP, Nakahiro RK.
Pharmacoeconomic evaluation of a pharmacist-managed hypertension clinic. Pharmacotherapy
2001;21(11):1337-44.
- Brown AS, Cofer LA.
Lipid management in a private cardiology practice (the Midwest Heart experience). Am J Cardiol 2000;85(3A):18A-22A.
- Kinn JW, O’Toole MF, Rowley SM, Marek JC, Bufalino VJ, Brown AS.
Effectiveness of the electronic medical record in cholesterol management in patients with coronary artery disease (Virtual Lipid Clinic). Am J Cardiol 2001;88(2):163-5, A5.
- Kinn JW, Marek JC, O’Toole MF, Rowley SM, Bufalino VJ.
Effectiveness of the electronic medical record in improving the management of hypertension. J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) 2002;4(6):415-9.
- Rogers MA, Small D, Buchan DA, Butch CA, Stewart CM, Krenzer BE, et al
Home monitoring service improves mean arterial pressure in patients with essential hypertension.
A randomized, controlled trial. Ann Intern Med 2001;134(11):1024-32.
- Stamos TD, Shaltoni H, Girard SA, Parrillo JE, Calvin JE.
Effectiveness of chart prompts to improve physician compliance with the National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines. Am J Cardiol 2001;88(12):1420-3, A8.
- Montgomery AA, Fahey T, Peters TJ, MacIntosh C, Sharp DJ.
Evaluation of computer based clinical decision support system and risk chart for management of hypertension in primary care: randomised controlled trial. BMJ 2000;320(7236):686-90.
- Bosworth HB, Olsen MK, Gentry P, Orr M, Dudley T, McCant F, et al
Nurse administered telephone intervention for blood pressure control: a patient-tailored multifactorial intervention.
Patient Educ Couns 2005;57(1):5-14.
- Bosworth H, Olsen K, Dudley T, Orr M, Goldstein M, Datta S, et al Patient education and provider decision support to control blood pressure in primary care: a cluster randomized trial. Ann Intern Med.
In press; 2008.
- Artinian NT, Washington OG, Templin TN.
Effects of home telemonitoring and community-based monitoring on blood pressure control in urban African Americans: a pilot study.
Heart Lung 2001;30(3):191-9.
- Siskind A, Johnson M, Qureshi A, Solow B, Chesebro D, Oldham N.
The impact of automatic prescriptions on reducing low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels. Eff Clin Pract 2000;3(5):240-6.
- Khoury AT, Wan GJ, Niedermaier ON, LeBrun B, Stiebeling B, Roth M, et al
Improved cholesterol management in coronary heart disease patients enrolled in an HMO. J Healthc Qual 2001;23(2):29-33.
- Stoddard AM, Palombo R, Troped PJ, Sorensen G, Will JC.
Cardiovascular disease risk reduction:
the Massachusetts WISEWOMAN project. J Womens Health (Larchmt)
2004;13(5):539-46.
- Appel LJ, Champagne CM, Harsha DW, Cooper LS, Obarzanek E, Elmer PJ, et al
Effects of comprehensive lifestyle modification on blood pressure control:
main results of the PREMIER clinical trial. JAMA 2003;289(16):2083-93.
- Vale MJ, Jelinek MV, Best JD, Dart AM, Grigg LE, Hare DL, et al
Coaching patients On Achieving Cardiovascular Health (COACH): a multicenter
randomized trial in patients with coronary heart disease. Arch Intern Med
2003;163(22):2775-83.
- Headrick LA, Speroff T, Pelecanos HI, Cebul RD.
Efforts to improve compliance with the National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines. Results of a randomized controlled trial. Arch Intern Med 1992;152(12):2490-6.
- Kisioglu A, Aslan B, Ozturk M, Aykut M, Ilhan I.
Improving control of high blood pressure among middle-aged Turkish women of low socio-economic status through public health training.
Croat Med J 2004;45(4):477-82.
- Lin T, Chen CH, Chou P.
Impact of the high-risk and mass strategies on hypertension control and stroke mortality in primary health care.
J Hum Hypertens 2004;18(2):97-105.
- Rachmani R, Slavacheski I, Berla M, Frommer-Shapira R, Ravid M.
Treatment of high-risk patients with diabetes: motivation and teaching
intervention: a randomized, prospective 8-year follow-up study. J Am Soc
Nephrol 2005;16(Suppl 1):S22-6.
- Davis AM, Vinci LM, Okwuosa TM, Huang ES.
Cardiovascular health disparities: a systematic review of health care
interventions. Med Care Res Rev 2007;64(5 Suppl):29S-100S.
- Brinkerhoff RO. The success case method: find out quickly what’s working and what’s not. San Francisco (CA): Berrett-Koehler Publishers,
Inc; 2003.
- IHI.org. Testing changes. Cambridge (MA): Institute for Healthcare
Improvement. http://ihi.org/IHI/Topics/Improvement/ImprovementMethods/ HowToImprove/testingchanges.htm. Accessed April 17, 2008.
- Hypertension diagnosis and treatment (guideline). Bloomington (MN):
Institutes for Clinical Systems Improvement. http://www.icsi.org/hypertension_4/hypertension_ diagnosis_and_treatment_4.html. Accessed April 17, 2008.
-
The sixth report of the Joint National Committee on prevention, detection,
evaluation, and treatment of high blood pressure. [Published erratum in:
Arch Intern Med 1998;158(6):573]. Arch Intern Med 1997;157(21):2413-46.
- DMAA definition of disease management. Washington (DC): DMAA: The Care
Continuum Alliance. http://www.dmaa.org/dm_definition.asp. Accessed
August 7, 2007.
Back to top
|
|