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Clinical Trials/NCT00257101
NCT00257101
Completed
Not Applicable

Stepped Intervention for Meds Adherence and Blood Pressure Control

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Cardiovascular Diseases
Sponsor
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Status
Completed
Last Updated
10 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

To test the effectiveness of a stepped-care intervention involving 2 stages: (1) Self-Telemonitoring (STM) of blood pressure (BP) which uses a telephone transmission system (2) Telephone-Based Nurse Case Management (NCM), provided by a commercially available service.

Detailed Description

DESIGN NARRATIVE: The Medication Adherence and Blood Pressure Control Trial (ABC Trial) is a randomized controlled trial in a multicultural population of uncontrolled, hypertensive patients to test the effectiveness of a stepped-care intervention involving 2 stages: (1) Self-Telemonitoring (STM) of blood pressure (BP) which uses a telephone transmission system by which an easy-to-use modem, contained in the BP monitor, sends the BP measurements to a commercial service (Lifelink Monitoring) who then sends the measurements to the patient's health care provider; and (2) Telephone-Based Nurse Case Management (NCM), provided by a commercially available service (U-Med). The nurse case managers will call patients once/month, and provide counseling regarding BP control, and adherence to medication regimens. All patients in the intervention condition will begin with STM; after 3 months, patients whose BP has come under control remain in the STM condition; patients whose BP remain uncontrolled are then randomized, half to NCM + Self-Telemonitoring; the other half to continue in STM only (the design allows us to evaluate the effects of each arm of the intervention separately, and the combination; in addition, there will be a Usual Care condition). The focus is on an intervention strategy which readily transfers to a variety of usual health care situations. Both interventions are commercially available, and therefore are accessible to a wide range of health care providers, including smaller community-based clinics. An innovative aspect of the intervention is that the 2 commercial services will work together; the nurse case managers will receive BP reports from Lifelink, which the nurse will then use as a basis for counseling. The effectiveness of the interventions will be tested in 12 community-based clinics, which serve an economically disadvantaged, largely African American and Hispanic population, in New York City. The main outcome measures are medication adherence, determined by electronic drug event monitoring (MEMS), and pharmacy refill records, as well as BP control. Study duration is 1 year. The multilevel focus of the interventions is on provider as well as patient behavior. Reviews will be conducted for each patient at study discharge, recording data on clinic BP measurements during the previous 12 months, if any, doctor appointments, ER visits, medication changes, and evidence that the physician has responded to the interventions. The long-term goals of the research are to assess the medical and cost effectiveness of the interventions separately, and combined.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
September 2001
End Date
August 2006
Last Updated
10 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Sex
All

Investigators

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Diagnosed as hypertensive; chart data indicating poor BP control on two successive visits; pharmacy records indicate poorly adherence in previous 6 months
  • Patients may have other co-morbid conditions
  • On at least one antihypertensive medication
  • Fluent in English or Spanish

Exclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Not specified

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