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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to improve cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in racial and ethnic minorities in Hawaii.


Clinical Trial Description

BACKGROUND:

While there has been great progress in reducing CVD morbidity and mortality in the U.S. over the past 40 years, some minority groups have not benefitted from this progress, and continue to have lower life expectancy and higher CVD morbidity. On average, minorities have more limited access to medical care, receive less aggressive care, and receive fewer diagnostic and therapeutic cardiac procedures than non-minority populations. Additionally, most minority groups adhere poorly to prescribed medical regimens and often present to emergency departments rather than primary care physicians for complications of advanced chronic CVD conditions. Thus, research to reduce health disparities by improving CVD outcomes in minorities offers potential for a substantial positive impact on public health. Academic medical centers and institutions that are capable of carrying out such research, however, often lack access to minority patients and have difficulty gaining the trust of those they are able to treat. Minority communities often report greater satisfaction when receiving care from minority providers and are reluctant to receive treatment outside their minority healthcare serving systems.

In general, minorities have high rates of elevated cholesterol, hypertension, cigarette smoking, obesity, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes. Other behavioral, environmental, and occupational risk factors for cardiovascular diseases, such as sleep problems are also common among minorties. These risk factors all contribute to excess CVD morbidity and mortality. Heart failure (HF) is also a major public health problem. The impact of HF on minority populations, such as Native Hawaiians and other Pacific peoples, is unknown. Native Hawaiians are known to have high rates of risk factors for HF and one of the highest rates of CVD mortality in the U.S. The causes of minority health disparities are complex and are not understood completely. Although evidence of genetic, biologic, and environmental factors is well documented, poor outcomes are also attributed to incomplete treatment. Such treatment may be due to limited access to health care or, in some cases, break-down of the medical system or failure of the physician and/or patient to allow for optimal health care, even when access is not impaired. The complex interactions of behavior, socio-economic status (SES), culture, and ethnicity are important predictors of health outcomes and sources of health disparities. Despite efforts to elucidate genetic and environmental risk factors and to promote cardiovascular health in high-risk populations, trends in CVD outcomes suggest that CVD health disparities continue to widen.

The Partnerships Program to Reduce Cardiovascular Health Disparities involves collaboration between research-intensive medical centers (RIMCs) that have a track record of NIH-supported research and patient care and minority healthcare serving systems (MSSs) that lack a strong research program. Each Partnership Program will design and carry out multiple interdisciplinary research projects that investigate complex biologic, behavioral, and societal factors that contribute to CVD health disparities and facilitate clinical research within the MSS. The aim will be to improve CVD outcomes and reduce health disparities. Additionally, each program will provide reciprocal educational and skills development programs to train investigators to conduct research that is aimed at reducing cardiovascular disparities, thereby enhancing research opportunities and enriching cultural sensitivity and cardiovascular research capabilities at both institutions.

The Request for Applications for Partnership Programs to Reduce Cardiovascular Disparities was released in September, 2003. The awards were made in September, 2004.

DESIGN NARRATIVE:

To address heart failure disparities among native Hawaiians and Pacific peoples, a partnership program, the HF Disparities Program (HFD), will be established between the Queen Emma Clinic (QEC) and the Department of Native Hawaiian Health. Partners of the HFD Program include tha following: MedStar Research Institute, Oahu-based Community Health Centers (CHCs), and the Hawaii EXPORT Center, an NIH-funded initiative addressing diabetes-associated disparities in native Hawaiians and Pacific peoples. The HFD Program will address the following aims: determine the reliability and validity of echocardiograms performed by community-based health workers compared to a professionally trained sonographer as the "gold standard"; determine if a culturally competent educational program for heart failure reduces HF hospitalizations and mortality compared to usual care; characterize ethnic differences in the HF syndrome in hospitalized native Hawaiians and Pacific peoples compared to Caucasians; construct HF pedigrees using probands identified at the Queen Emma Clinic for a future HF linkage study in native Hawaiians and Pacific peoples; educate community-based health workers to perform echocardiography scans for the detection of HF in a high risk population of native Hawaiians and Pacific peoples; and train new investigators to conduct research focused on CVD disparities in general, and HF in particular. By achieving these aims, the HFD Program will improve access to HF care at Community Health Centers that serve native Hawaiians and Pacific peoples, fill a gap in knowledge of CVD disparities in native Hawaiians and Pacific peoples, and provide a foundation for future studies on genetic determinants of HF. ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00101465
Study type Observational
Source University of Hawaii
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date September 2004
Completion date August 2011

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