At a glance
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Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach to Optimize the Hypertension Diagnosis and Care Cascade for HIV-infected Individuals
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach for Hypertension Screening and Treatment Optimization for HIV/AIDS and Hypertension. Completed, enrolled 305 participants across 16 sites.
Detailed Summary
As undiagnosed and untreated hypertension is one of the largest drivers of cardiovascular disease in sub-Saharan Africa approaches are needed to optimize the hypertension care cascade. The HIV treatment platform in low and middle income countries provides a robust, scalable foundation to address other chronic care priorities, such as hypertension. This proposal will evaluate an evidence-based intervention designed to improve chronic care services (the Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach (SAIA)) for hypertension detection and management in people living with HIV, and will build evidence on how to achieve rapid, sustainable and scalable improvements in services that can dramatically improve population health in resource-limited countries.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
The Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach to Optimize the Hypertension Care Cascade for People Living with HIV (SAIA-HTN) is a five-step systems analysis and iterative improvement cycle intervention which will be implemented by study nurses and district managers in intervention facilities. Components of the intervention include joint care cascade analysis, patient flow mapping and continuous quality improvement, aimed to incrementally improve hypertension screening, diagnosis, treatment and care in the HIV+ population at intervention health facilities.