"Get Ready and Empowered About Treatment" (GREAT) Study: a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial of Activation in Persons Living with HIV

Jennifer K Carroll, Jonathan N Tobin, Amneris Luque, Subrina Farah, Mechelle Sanders, Andrea Cassells, Steven M Fine, Wendi Cross, Michele Boyd, Tameir Holder, Marie Thomas, Cleo Clarize Overa, Kevin Fiscella, Jennifer K Carroll, Jonathan N Tobin, Amneris Luque, Subrina Farah, Mechelle Sanders, Andrea Cassells, Steven M Fine, Wendi Cross, Michele Boyd, Tameir Holder, Marie Thomas, Cleo Clarize Overa, Kevin Fiscella

Abstract

Background: Little is known about strategies to improve patient activation, particularly among persons living with HIV (PLWH).

Objective: To assess the impact of a group intervention and individual coaching on patient activation for PLWH.

Design: Pragmatic randomized controlled trial.

Sites: Eight practices in New York and two in New Jersey serving PLWH.

Participants: Three hundred sixty PLWH who received care at participating practices and had at least limited English proficiency and basic literacy.

Intervention: Six 90-min group training sessions covering use of an ePersonal Health Record loaded onto a handheld mobile device and a single 20-30 min individual pre-visit coaching session.

Main measures: The primary outcome was change in Patient Activation Measure (PAM). Secondary outcomes were changes in eHealth literacy (eHEALS), Decision Self-efficacy (DSES), Perceived Involvement in Care Scale (PICS), health (SF-12), receipt of HIV-related care, and change in HIV viral load (VL).

Key results: The intervention group showed significantly greater improvement than the control group in the primary outcome, the PAM (difference 2.82: 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.32-5.32). Effects were largest among participants with lowest quartile PAM at baseline (p < 0.05). The intervention doubled the odds of improving one level on the PAM (odds ratio 1.96; 95% CI 1.16-3.31). The intervention group also had significantly greater improvement in eHEALS (difference 2.67: 95% CI 1.38-3.9) and PICS (1.27: 95% CI 0.41-2.13) than the control group. Intervention effects were similar by race/ethnicity and low education with the exception of eHealth literacy where effects were stronger for minority participants. No statistically significant effects were observed for decision self-efficacy, health status, adherence, receipt of HIV relevant care, or HIV viral load.

Conclusions: The patient activation intervention modestly improved several domains related to patient empowerment; effects on patient activation were largest among those with the lowest levels of baseline patient activation.

Trial registration: This study is registered at Clinical Trials.Gov (NCT02165735).

Keywords: HIV; computer literacy; health literacy; patient participation; self-care.

Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they do not have a conflict of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Figure 1. The GREAT study participant flow diagram. Figure 1 contains poor quality of text inside the artwork. Please do not re-use the file that we have rejected or attempt to increase its resolution and re-save. It is originally poor, therefore, increasing the resolution will not solve the quality problem. We suggest that you provide us the original format. We prefer replacement figures containing vector/editable objects rather than embedded images. Preferred file formats are eps, ai, tiff and pdf."Figures 1 please confirm if captured correctly.attached

Source: PubMed

3
Sottoscrivi