Reducing Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease (ASCVD) Through a Comprehensive Heart Disease Prevention Program (HDPP)
University of Pennsylvania
Summary
To leverage access to patients across the primary care network, EPIC tools for identifying eligible patients, and the Way to Health platform to launch and enroll a program that will be evaluated in a clinical trial that is focused on changing patient behavior and powered to detect differences in improving blood pressure and cholesterol over 6 months for Penn Medicine patients in West/Southwest Philadelphia and Lancaster.
Description
To leverage access to patients across the primary care network, EPIC tools for identifying eligible patients, and the Way to Health platform to launch and enroll Penn Medicine primary care patients into the Penn Medicine Healthy Heart, a six-month program for reduction of hypertension and hypercholesterolemia grounded in behavioral economics insights to increase uptake of and adherence to evidence-based interventions to reduce ASCVD risk. Penn Medicine Healthy Heart emphasizes proactive outreach and prevention outside of a traditional visit model using data assets to identify and risk stratify…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 35–80 years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * On the Penn Medicine Primary Care Service Line registry * Last 2 Blood Pressure readings with Systolic Blood Pressure \>=140 from any outpatient encounter in the last 12 months AND * ASCVD dx OR ASCVD risk score ≥10% OR Diabetes dx OR A1c ≥6.5 in last year OR Diabetes registry OR Last LDL ≥190 in past five years AND * Not on a statinor PCSK9, Inclisiran OR on a Low-intensity/moderate-intensity statin) with LDL \>100 Exclusion Criteria: * Patients on PCSK9 inhibitors * Documented statin allergy/ or intolerance in the EMR * Pregnancy * Breast feeding * Markedly shortened…
Interventions
- BehavioralPenn Med Healthy Heart Program
Patients randomized to the intervention arm will be assigned a Patient Navigator (Clinical Research Coordinators, with support from Nurse Practitioners and a Medical Director) who will conduct an initial assessment with the patient to determine their main barriers to improving blood pressure and cholesterol control. The Patient Navigators will provide the patient with a home blood pressure cuff for remote monitoring, support from Way to Health text message reminders, referrals to established Penn Medicine smoking cessation programs, and referrals to nutrition and social workers as applicable. The Patient Navigators will help move the patients through four modules: Blood Pressure, Food Insecurity/Nutrition Screening, Statins, and Smoking Cessation. These modules provide patients with the chance to work on blood pressure, cholesterol control, access nutrition resources, and smoking cessation simultaneously or sequentially.
Location
- Penn MedicinePhiladelphia, Pennsylvania