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Black Health Identification Program (B-HIP)

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Multiple Chronic Conditions
Family Members
Interventions
Behavioral: "My Health Priorities" Identification Program
Registration Number
NCT05129709
Lead Sponsor
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Brief Summary

Nearly 69% of African American (AA) Medicare beneficiaries have multiple chronic conditions (MCCs) such as cancer and cardiopulmonary diseases. Older age and MCCs are guideline-recommended indications for referral to early palliative care to assist with effective communication and value-solicitation surrounding treatment decision-making. Studies have shown that early palliative care participation achieves beneficial goals of care communication, quality of life (QOL), symptom burden, and mood in older adults with cancer and heart failure as well as among their family caregivers. However, older AAs with MCCs, especially those living in the Deep South, are less likely to have access to early palliative care, even though they generally experience higher symptom burden, healthcare use, and poorer communication around goals of care. This disparity in palliative care use may be, in part, to a lack of culturally-responsive care practices that effectively activate AAs with MCCs to identify their own values and priorities for end-of-life care. While efficacious communication models exist, few have been tested in culturally-diverse samples. Guided by the theory of Social Cognitive Theory and Health Behavior Model, this study's purpose is to conduct a formative evaluation of a Self-directed "My Health Priorities" Identification Program to determine cultural acceptability and feasibility of use in among AAs with MCCs in a primary care setting. The 2-phase study specific aims are to:

Aim 1. (Phase 1) Conduct a single-arm formative evaluation trial of Self-directed "My Health Priorities" Identification Program to determine acceptability and feasibility with a sample of 20 AA patients with MCCs and FCGs and adapt for future efficacy testing.

Aim 2. (Phase 2) To examine the ability of the dyads to complete pre- and post-test measures of perception of care, treatment burden, shared decision-making, and communication exchange.

The findings from the research will directly inform a small-scale pilot grant that will assess acceptability, feasibility, and potential efficacy of a values solicitation and operationalization intervention for AAs with MCCs and caregivers.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
30
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
"My Health Priorities" Identification Program"My Health Priorities" Identification ProgramThe intervention, the "My Health Priorities" Identification Program consists of four self-directed, web-based modules intended to guide patients with MCCs in identifying their own health priorities. These priorities can then be used to guide discussions with family caregivers and clinicians regarding specific goals and preferences that they wish to guide future treatment decisions. Most models of palliative care have been developed based on white middle-class populations and may not apply to African Americans (AA) who have a very different cultural value set.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
A single arm formative evaluation (qualitative interviews) exploring acceptability of programone-time interview six weeks following baseline questionnaires

Semi-structured interview of family caregivers (FCG) of patients with MCC

Change in Older Patient Assessment of Chronic Illness Care (O-PACIC)18 weeks post-baseline

Measure of older patient perception of primary care delivery; 10 items scored on a 5 point likert scale with 1 indicating "almost never" and 5 indicating "almost always". Higher scores reflect that patients have a more positive feeling about their care.

A single arm formative evaluation (qualitative interviews) exploring acceptability of the programone-time interview six weeks following baseline questionnaires

Semi-structured interview of patients with multiple chronic illness (MCC)

Program Completion Statisticsone-time interview six weeks following baseline questionnaires

Usability statistics will be obtained about the length of time the participant engaged with the program, and module completion rates

Clinical Shared Decision Making Questionnaire (CollaboRATE)Baseline

Patients with MCC-reported measure of clinical shared decision-making; 3 items requiring open-ended responses (no scale)

Older Patient Assessment of Chronic Illness Care (O-PACIC)Baseline

Questionnaire of perception of care among patients with MCC. The questionnaire consists of 10 items scored on a 5 point likert scale with 5 indicating "almost always" and 1 indicating "almost never". Higher scores thus reflect patients' perception of better care.

Treatment Burden Questionnaire (TBQ)Baseline

Patients with MCC perception of QOL and treatment burden related to chronic illness; 15 items rated on a ten point scale with 0 indicating that the item "is not a problem" and 10 indicating that the item reflects a "big problem".

Bakas Caregiver Outcomes (BCOS)Baseline

Measures FCG social function, subjective well-being, and somatic health; 10 items rated on a 7 point likert scale with -3 reflecting "changed for the worst" and +3 indicating "changed for the better".

Change in Bakas Caregiver Outcomes (BCOS)18 weeks post-baseline

Measures FCG social function, subjective well-being, and somatic health; 10 items rated on a 7 point likert scale with -3 reflecting "changed for the worst" and +3 indicating "changed for the better".

Shared Care Instrument (SCI)Baseline

PT and FCG's perception of communication exchange regarding illness experience, subscales include communication, decision making, and reciprocity; 19 items divided into 3 summary scales, each item is scored in likert format from 0 to 5 with 0 indicating "completely disagree" and 5 indicating "completely agree". On the communication subscale a higher score indicates better communication. For the patient decision making subscale, higher scores indicate better patient decision making. For the patient reciprocity scale, higher scores indicate more reciprocity between patient and caregiver.

System Usability Scale (ISUS)one-time interview six weeks following baseline questionnaires

Measures usability of web-based applications and programs in both patients and FCG,. subscales evaluate how learnable and usable the tested program is; 10 items, 5 items are scored positively and 5 items are scored negatively using a 5 point likert scale with 5 indicating strongly agree and 1 indicating strongly disagree

Change in Treatment Burden Questionnaire (TBQ)18 weeks post-baseline

Patients with MCC perception of QOL and treatment burden related to chronic illness; 15 items rated on a ten point scale with 0 indicating that the item "is not a problem" and 10 indicating that the item reflects a "big problem".

Change in Clinical Shared Decision Making Questionnaire (CollaboRATE)18 weeks post-baseline

Patients with MCC-reported measure of clinical shared decision-making; 3 items requiring open-ended responses (no scale)

Change in Shared Care Instrument (SCI)18 weeks post-baseline

PT perception of communication exchange regarding illness experience, subscales include communication, decision making, and reciprocity; 19 items divided into 3 summary scales, each item is scored in likert format from 0 to 5 with 0 indicating "completely disagree" and 5 indicating "completely agree". On the communication subscale a higher score indicates better communication. For the patient decision making subscale, higher scores indicate better patient decision making. For the patient reciprocity scale, higher scores indicate more reciprocity between patient and caregiver.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The Whitaker Clinic at the University of Alabama at Birmingham

🇺🇸

Birmingham, Alabama, United States

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