Implementing a Digitally-enabled Community Health Worker Intervention for Patients With Heart Failure

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to assess the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness of implementing a 30-day digitally-enabled community health worker intervention compared to usual care with a community health worker in reducing heart failure 30-day readmissions within a pilot randomized controlled trial.

Condition

  • Heart Failureļ¼ŒCongestive

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 18 Years and 99 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  • Age ā‰„18 years - HF diagnosis - English proficiency - Residence within 30 miles of MGH - Being cared for by a cardiologist or primary care provider who manages their HF - Current use and ownership of a smart phone

Exclusion Criteria

  • Cognitive deficits that prevent digital or human engagement - Lack of health insurance - Invoked health proxy or guardianship status - History of smart phone use

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description
Randomized Controlled Trial
Primary Purpose
Other
Masking
Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Masking Description
The outcomes assessor team will be blinded to the intervention assignments of participants. Due to the nature of the intervention, the participants, the investigator, and the care providers are unable to be blinded to the participant assignments.

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
Intervention
Patients identified by the MGH readmission database and the EHR as eligible for the study will be enrolled. Participants will be paired with a community health worker and oriented to the digital platform ( mobile app, digital weight scale, digital blood pressure monitor, biosensor with armband). Participants will have access to the community health worker and the digital platform throughout the 30-day study interval.
  • Other: Digitally-enabled CHW Care
    Patients will be paired with a CHW and be encouraged to wear the arm biosensor continuously, take blood pressure daily, respond to short symptom assessments daily or every other day, complete weekly life quality surveys, watch weekly HF educational videos and engage in digital (e.g., video visit) and phone-based, and in-person CHW interactions. Each participant will have access to the digital platform and CHW staff during their hospitalization and for the 30 days following discharge for a typical study duration of approximately 32-35 days. Participants will complete questionnaires at the time of enrollment and at study end. Participants will also complete exit interviews in-person or via phone after the study ends.
Active Comparator
Usual CHW Care
Patients identified by the MGH readmission database and the EHR as eligible for the study will be enrolled. Participants will be paired with a community health worker. Participants will have access to the community health worker throughout the 30-day study interval.
  • Behavioral: Usual CHW Care
    Patients will be paired with a CHW for 30-days. Participants will complete questionnaires at the time of enrollment and at study end. Participants will also complete exit interviews in-person or via phone after the study ends.

Recruiting Locations

Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts 02114
Contact:
Jocelyn Carter, MD, MPH
617-726-2000
jcarter0@partners.org

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital

Study Contact

Jocelyn A Carter, MD
617-726-4801
jcarter0@partners.org

Detailed Description

Heart failure (HF) is a highly prevalent disease in the United States, with elevated morbidity and mortality. Nearly 6.2 million people in the US are affected by HF and this number is expected to rise to 8.5 million by 2030. Total direct medical costs of HF, mostly generated by inpatient hospitalizations, are estimated to increase from $21 billion in 2012 to $53 billion by 2030. HF is the leading cause of 30-day readmissions in the US; a quarter of these are considered to be preventable. Most patients with HF are readmitted to hospital medicine services for non-HF co-morbidities (e.g. pneumonia) with clinical, social, and behavioral factors driving readmissions. Despite numerous interventions designed to prevent readmissions, including telemetry monitoring, only marginal HF outcome improvement has been observed. HF readmission rates remain elevated and could be prevented by a multidisciplinary approach promoting better connections to and communication with clinical care teams while addressing social and behavioral barriers to HF care. One approach that has demonstrated improved chronic disease outcomes by addressing social, behavioral, and basic clinical barriers to care- and has yet to be formally studied in HF populations- is community health workers (CHWs). CHWs are members of clinical teams who address social, economic, educational, behavioral, and basic clinical factors influencing health outcomes while fostering patient connections to care teams. CHW care delivery is one of a few interventions shown to reduce readmissions in patients with chronic disease. CHWs have basic clinical knowledge of specific conditions, along with a skillset designed to address social and behavioral drivers of health outcomes like 30-day readmissions. However, CHW care is challenged by key factors, including intensive 1:1 care delivery, limiting its scale and efficiency. In 2016, a biotechnology company launched a HF digital platform within a mobile phone application to help reduce 30-day readmissions in patients with HF by 1) leveraging artificial intelligence to minimize false alarms in biometric monitoring, 2) promoting early identification of decline in HF patients, and 3) encouraging digital and in-person communication between patients and care teams. In preliminary findings, digital platform clinical trial data has shown promise in reducing HF 30-day readmissions. This study will investigate the effectiveness of this platform in combination with CHW care in reducing readmissions for medically and socially complex patients with HF. Through a partnership with the digital platform creators, our team has helped develop a prototype for patients with HF cared for by CHWs ("digitally-enabled" CHW care). Specifically, the aim of this proposal are to assess the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness of implementing a digitally-enabled CHW intervention compared to CHW care to reduce HF 30-day readmissions within a pilot RCT (n=50) My central hypothesis is that pairing patients with a digitally-enabled CHW intervention that addresses social and behavioral barriers to HF care, promotes communication with clinical care teams, and improves CHW efficiency will reduce 30-day readmissions while improving patient engagement with HF care.