Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effectiveness of Personalized Stroke Risk Communication - A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
The goal of this research is to improve communication to Veterans. The investigators want to improve how doctors and nurses talk to patients about the risk of heart attack and stroke. The investigators will give everyone in the study information about the risk for heart attack or stroke. The investigators will also provide information on how to reduce this risk. This information will be given in one of two ways. The investigators want to see which way of giving information works better for veterans. The investigators also want to assess the impact of personalized stroke risk communication to patients at risk for stroke on patient knowledge, beliefs, and preferences for risk reduction behaviors and evaluate the impact of personalized risk communication on medication adherence and blood pressure. The investigators plan to enroll approximately 100 veterans for this study. All veterans will be from the Durham VA Primary Care Clinics. The investigators will ask everyone to be in the study for 3 months.
Background:
In 2005, over 17,000 patients were treated for stroke within the VA with a cost of almost
$315 million. Prevention of stroke through reduction of established risk factors is an
essential part of the VA Stroke QUERI strategic plan for the VA. In spite of this, in the
Veterans Affairs, only 13% of patients with known CVD achieve target BP and cholesterol
control. Combining risk factors into a composite measure of risk offers a better global
assessment of individual risk and is recommended by the American Heart Association and
American Stroke Association for prioritizing interventions. This practice is rarely done in
routine clinical practice and its use as a tool to motivate patient behavior has not been
tested. Current evidence from VA patients suggests that patients with hypertension do not
adequately translate their risk factors into an accurate estimation of stroke risk.
Improving the accuracy of stroke risk perceptions may be particularly important in
motivating risk reduction in patients.
Objectives:
The objectives of this study are to: 1.) Assess the impact of personalized stroke risk
communication to patients at risk for stroke on patient knowledge, beliefs, and preferences
for risk reduction behaviors. 2.) Evaluate the impact of personalized risk communication on
medication adherence and blood pressure. 3.) Explore the feasibility and obtain sample size
estimates for a larger, investigator initiative research (IIR) application testing this
tool.
Methods:
A two-group randomized controlled trial testing a personalized risk communication
intervention compared to an education-only control group was conducted. Eighty-nine patients
were randomized and followed for 3months. Both groups received written and verbal patient
education on stroke risk factors and prevention. Patients in the intervention arm also
received personalized risk communication based on the Framingham stroke and coronary heart
disease risk scores. A verbal and graphic presentation of their personal risk, risk relative
to an age matched cohort, and their optimal or target risk based on optimal risk factor
modification was presented. Outcomes measured immediately following the intervention and at
3months included: risk perception and worry; risk factor knowledge; decision preference and
conflict; medication adherence; health behaviors; and blood pressure.
Status:
The study finished enrollment and all follow-up visits have been completed. The data from
this project is being analyzed.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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