A culturally tailored, team-based care management approach improved blood pressure control for black patients from 76.6% to 81.4% and narrowed the black-white disparity gap from 6.3% to 2.8%.
Observational (n=9,058)
Yes
Absolute Event Rate: 81.4% vs 76.6%
OBJECTIVES: At Kaiser Permanente, national Equitable Care Health Outcomes (ECHO) Reports with a baseline measurement of 16 Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set measures stratified by race and ethnicity showed a disparity of 8.1 percentage points in blood pressure (BP) control rates between African- American/black (black) and white members. The aims of this study were to describe a population care management team-based approach to improve BP control for large populations and to explain how a culturally tailored, patient-centered approach can address this racial disparity. METHODS: These strategies were implemented through: 1) physician-led educational programs on treatment intensification, medication adherence, and consistent use of clinical practice guidelines; 2) building strong care teams by defining individual roles and responsibilities in hypertension management; 3) redesign of the care delivery system to expand access; and 4) programs on culturally tailored communication tools and self-management. RESULTS: At a physician practice level where 65% of patients with hypertension were black, BP control rates (< 140/90 mmHg) for blacks improved from 76.6% to 81.4%, and control rates for whites increased from 82.9% to 84.2%. The racial gap narrowed from 6.3% to 2.8%. As these successful practices continue to spread throughout the program, the health disparity gap in BP control has decreased by 50%, from 8.1% to 3.9%. CONCLUSION: A sustainable program to collect self-reported race, ethnicity, and language preference data integrated with successful population care management programs provided the foundation for addressing health disparities. Cultural tailoring of a multilevel team-based approach closed the gap for blacks with hypertension.
Bartolome et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Hypertension (n=9,058). Culturally tailored population care management and team-based approach vs. Baseline (historical control) was evaluated on Blood pressure control (< 140/90 mmHg) rate for black patients. A culturally tailored, team-based care management approach improved blood pressure control for black patients from 76.6% to 81.4% and narrowed the black-white disparity gap from 6.3% to 2.8%.
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