South Carolina
Excellence Initiative
for Eliminating Disparities
In Healthcare
 
HOME INTRODUCTION PROJECTS PILOT PROJECTS CORES NEWS ROOM INFO CENTER LINKS
 INTRODUCTION
  Program Overview
  Black Population in 2000
  Black Poverty in 1999
  Annual Reports
  Other Exceed Centers
 PROJECTS
  Treating Hypertension
  Treating HIV/AIDS
  End-Of-Life Care
  Refilling Prescriptions
 PILOT PROJECTS
  Group Visits for Diabetes
  Diabetes & Depression
  Adherence to MST
  Pain Management
 CORES
  Administrative Core
  Biostatistics Core
  Investigator Dev. Core
 PUBLIC NEWS ROOM
  Seminar Announcement
  News
  Fundings & Resources
  Conferences and Call for Paper
  Other Information
 STAFF INFO CENTER
  Secure Login
  MUSC Boilerplate
  GCRC at MUSC
  Staff Directory
  ORS Request Procedure
  Healthcare Privacy Rule (PDF)
 MEDTEP APPENDIX
 LINKS
EXCEED Project 1
 
Reducing the Racial Disparity in CV Disease Through Better BP Control
 
Background. Hypertension clearly contributes to the racial disparities in health outcomes. The Charleston Heart Study indicated that hypertension contributed to ~40% of deaths in Blacks compared to ~20% in Whites.
  1. The prevalence and complications of hypertension are greater and control rates lower among hypertensive patients of lower socioeconomic status (SES) which are disproportionately Black.
  2. For these and other reasons, blacks in South Carolina continue to die from stroke at double the rate of whites.
  3. The Hypertension Detection and Follow-Up Program (HDFP) showed that stepped-care treatment of high blood pressure (BP) reduced stroke and total mortality more in blacks than in whites.
  4. Although access to care is a significant issue for low income individuals, especially the uninsured, control of hypertension to <140/90 mmHg is obtained on >75% of visits in only ~20% of patients. Therefore, a logical approach to optimizing BP control rates in the population is to first improve efficiency, i.e., do a better job with the >50% of hypertensive patients who are already in the system but the majority of whom are not consistently at the goal BP.
  5. Once that is accomplished, then improving access will lead to a more efficient utilization of resources and greater control rates. Reluctance of providers to increase therapy is a major contributor to inadequate BP control.
  6. An outpatient hypertension management program at Univ. of Pennsylvania, which focused on providers, increased BP control rates from 19–53% within one year.
  7. Thus, our initial focus and the principal emphasis of this proposal is on the provider and treatment of hypertension and associated risk factors.
Hypothesis Raising provider awareness through a either local Hypertension Expert or feedback on BP control for individual patients will be more effective than traditional continuing medical education (CME) in improving BP control rates. Study design.

Using a randomized design, we propose to identify primary care providers in geographically separate areas serving a large proportion of lower income black patients. Given an aging population, a disproportionate increase of systolic BP with aging, and the fact that systolic BP is less often controlled than diastolic BP and contributes to cardiovascular events and dementia, practices serving a high proportion of elderly Blacks will be selected. Practices will be randomly allocated to one of three groups.
  1. Hypertension Expert-Selected providers will be trained as the group expert (opinion leader) to
    1. develop goals and practice guidelines for implementation in their practice
    2. educate their peers and provide consultations on uncontrolled hypertensive patients and
    3. participate in evaluating BP control at their site.
  2. Feedback on BP control. These providers will receive feedback on treatment goals and control for individual hypertensive patients in their practice.
  3. Hypertension Expert plus Feedback. BP control rates at one year will be assessed by chart review.


Links to related websites:

The Hypertension Initiative of South Carolina

American Heart Association

American Society of Hypertension (ASH)

South Carolina Medical Association (SCMA)

The Consortium for Southeastern Hypertension Control (COSEHC)

Diabetes Initiative of South Carolina

Service Center Medical University of South carolina         Department of Biostatistics, Bioinformatics, and Epidemiology
Please send comments, suggestions or questions to: webmaster