Abstract

BackgroundThough clinical practice guidelines are available, the diagnosis of pediatric hypertension (HTN) is often missed. Management may not follow guidelines due to the measurement challenges in children, complexity of interpreting youth blood pressure standards that are dependent on height, age, and sex, familiarity with diagnostic criteria, and variable comfort with management of pediatric HTN among providers. Evidence suggests that wide adoption and adherence to pediatric HTN guidelines would result in lower cardiovascular disease and kidney damage in adulthood. The proposed project will develop an implementation strategy package to increase adherence to clinical practice guidelines for pediatric HTN within safety-net community health centers (CHCs). The centerpiece of which is a provider-facing population panel management (PPM) tool and point-of-care clinical decision support (CDS). Prior research indicates that multiple discrete implementation strategies (e.g., stakeholder involvement, readiness planning, training, ongoing audit and feedback) are needed to institute practice- and provider-level adoption of such tools.MethodsUsing participatory research methods involving stakeholders from a practice-based research network of CHCs, with input from scientific advisors, the project aims to (1) employ user-centered design methods to tailor an existing CDS tool for use at the point of care and optimize cohort management with a PPM tool to support adherence to the latest pediatric HTN guidelines, and (2) use a stakeholder-driven method for selecting implementation strategies that support tool adoption and increase guideline-adherent physician behaviors. Multilevel process evaluation using surveys and key informant interview data will assess the acceptability, adoption, appropriateness, cost, and feasibility of the PPM tool and its multicomponent implementation strategy package. Usability testing will be conducted with the PPM tool to iteratively refine features and ensure proper functionality.DiscussionThe proposed research has the potential to improve identification, diagnosis, and management of HTN in primary care settings for high-risk youth by assisting healthcare providers in implementing the American Academy of Pediatrics’ 2017 guidelines using an EHR-integrated PPM tool with CDS. Should the strategy package for PPM tool adoption be successful for pediatric HTN, findings will be translatable to other settings and PPM of other chronic cardiovascular conditions affecting overall population health.

Highlights

  • MethodsUsing participatory research methods involving stakeholders from a practice-based research network of Community health center (CHC), with input from scientific advisors, the project aims to (1) employ user-centered design methods to tailor an existing clinical decision support (CDS) tool for use at the point of care and optimize cohort management with a population panel management (PPM) tool to support adherence to the latest pediatric HTN guidelines, and (2) use a stakeholder-driven method for selecting implementation strategies that support tool adoption and increase guideline-adherent physician behaviors

  • Though clinical practice guidelines are available, the diagnosis of pediatric hypertension (HTN) is often missed

  • Should the strategy package for population panel management (PPM) tool adoption be successful for pediatric HTN, findings will be translatable to other settings and PPM of other chronic cardiovascular conditions affecting overall population health

Read more

Summary

Methods

Aim 1: Tailor CDS and optimize PPM tools that addresses multilevel implementation barriers The co-design workshops (n = 2) and stakeholder panel meetings (n = 2 meetings), and the “think aloud” portion of usability testing sessions (n = 20 total), will be evaluated through a sequential mixed methods approach involving rapid qualitative analysis of video recordings alongside quantitative results of the System Usability Scale [64]. In this project, the CFIR [56] interview guide will be used to semi-structure the stakeholder panel meetings. Our team will continue to modify the protocol as required to meet the shifting needs of our stakeholders and collaborators in the healthcare system during this pandemic, while adhering to public health guidelines, guidance from Northwestern University, and recommendations from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the Illinois and Chicago Departments of Public Health

Discussion
Background
Findings

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.