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. 2020 Jun 4;5(6):e001959. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2019-001959

Table 1.

Overview of interventions by HealthRise site

Site Implementation Key characteristics/challenges of communities served by HealthRise Key HealthRise interventions and activities
Brazil
Teófilo Otoni region (comprises 10 municipalities), Minas Gerais State May 2017 to December 2018
  • Target population: 30–69 years.

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: high illiteracy rates; low per capita income.

  • Healthcare challenges: poor access to laboratory testing despite high coverage of primary healthcare; low rates of self-management of conditions; inefficient communication among care team members.

  • Screening and follow-up: hosted health fairs in collaboration with primary care providers in each municipality; targeted home visits by CHWs for screening and follow-up;

  • Technologies for care coordination: equipped basic health units (BHUs) with computers, notebooks, tablets and Wi-Fi for patient consultations with Central Telehealth Units; implementation of a Clinical Decision Support System; increased availability of specialised tests, including A1c point-of-care strategy;

  • Workforce development: developed online courses focused on providing routine HTN and DM care, including strategies for disease management and healthy nutrition;

  • Clinical and non-clinical patient support: created association for people with HTN and DM; coordinated patient support and educational activities, like cooking workshops and physical education sessions.

Vitória da Conquista, Bahia State March 2017 to December 2018
  • Target population: ≥30 years.

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: 40% of population living under the poverty line;

  • Healthcare challenges: inadequate chronic disease management at the primary care level, including limited staffing (eg, 1 physician per 8000 people); lack of electronic medical records (EMRs);

  • Screening and follow-up: hosted 23 health fairs in collaboration with primary care providers in urban areas; industry worker screening; targeted follow-up home visits by CHWs;

  • Technologies for care coordination: implemented EMRs in 16 BHUs; developed digital screening and job aid tools on promoting healthy lifestyles for CHWs; increased availability of specialised tests, including A1c point-of-care strategy;

  • Workforce development: trained healthcare professionals on digital tools and care management;

  • Clinical and non-clinical patient support: CHWs surveyed patients at each BHU for adherence to follow-up care; educated patients on self-care, adherence to treatment and healthy behaviours; produced educational cartoons for CHWs to show patients on tablets and at waiting rooms; three outdoor gyms built at strategic primary healthcare units.

India
Udaipur, Rajasthan June 2016 to November 2018
  • Target population: 15–70 years.

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: 80% of population is rural and considered tribal; among India's most underdeveloped districts for sociodemographic indicators.

  • Healthcare challenges: challenges in physical access to facilities; low health literacy for NCDs; public health facilities are overburdened, with inadequate resources and staff for chronic care.

  • Screening and follow-up: conducted multipronged campaigns to increase awareness about screening camps; involved outreach workers, accredited social health activists (ASHAs) and auxiliary nurse midwives (ANMs) in screening and postscreening activities, follow-up visits and follow-up calls;

  • Technologies for care coordination: developed electronic management information system (MIS); tracked NCD diagnoses and treatment data through NCD registries; developed referral system for government health centres.

  • Workforce development: implemented trainer of the trainers curriculum of NCD skills and HealthRise approaches to ASHAs, ANMs and medical officers to facilitate sustained NCD care practices;

  • Clinical and non-clinical patient support: set up support groups for patients and families; implemented the SALT approach (Stimulate, Appreciate, Learn, and Transfer) in five pilot villages to empower communities to understand and improve their health.

Shimla, Himachal Pradesh June 2016 to November 2018
  • Target population: 15–70 years.

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: 75% of population in rural areas; 84% literacy rate in 2011; 22% unemployment rate in 2016.

  • Healthcare challenges: challenges in physical access to facilities; insufficient human resources for health, equipment and infrastructure for chronic disease management; competing priorities among patients, hindering NCD diagnosis and treatment adherence.

  • Screening and follow-up: conducted multipronged campaigns to increase awareness about screening camps; involved outreach workers, ASHAs, and ANMs in screening and post-screening activities, follow-up visits and follow-up calls;

  • Technologies for care coordination: established e-clinics for rural patients to access advanced care; strengthened data collection capacity at sub-centres and primary health centres (PHCs); developed electronic MIS for sub-centres; developed and implemented electronic Health Card, a tablet application for ASHAs to catalogue individual risk factors and facilitate referral follow-up at PHCs;

  • Workforce development: delivered trainer of the trainers curriculum on NCD skills and HealthRise approaches to ASHAs, ANMs, and medical officers to facilitate sustained NCD care practices;

  • Clinical and non-clinical patient support: set up support groups for patients and families that met quarterly; implemented SALT approach in 14 villages to empower communities to understand and improve their health;

South Africa
Pixley ka Seme, Northern Cape March 2017 to August 2018
  • Target population: Emthanjeni municipality; populations living in this area identify as 57.7% coloured, 32.2% black African and 8% white.

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: primarily rural population; 43.5% poverty rate; 28% employment rate in 2016.

  • Healthcare challenges: long distances to health facilities; limited transportation options; compounding health issues and socioeconomic vulnerabilities pose additional challenges to an overburdened local health system.

  • Screening and follow-up: promoted awareness of and screening for DM and HTN in partnership with the extensive CHW network of Nightingale Hospice; conducted screenings and NCD education at community health events, targeted door-to-door campaigns, HIV and Tuberculosis (TB) support groups, retirement homes and shelters, and farms and solar plants; conducted follow-up via phone or in-person as needed, and facilitated patient visits (eg, arrange for transportation);

  • Technologies for care coordination: supported the creation of a database of DM and HTN patients; enabled tablet-based data collection at community screening events and door-to-door visits;

  • Workforce development: trained CHWs in DM and HTN screening processes; provided screening equipment to CHWs; provided 4 day trainings on DM and HTN management for clinic-based providers;

  • Clinical and non-clinical patient support: clinic nurses ensured confirmatory diagnoses and follow-up with patients who failed to attend appointments, pick up medications, or meet control targets; organised patient support groups for patient empowerment and self-care; set up gardening, via the Department of Agriculture and Forestry, and village savings and loans programmes.

uMgungundlovu, KwaZulu-Natal February 2017 to August 2018
  • Target population: those in Msunduzi, uMshwathi, and Mkhambathini subdistricts. Msunduzi has the provincial capital.

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: uMshwathi and Mkambathini have unemployment rates of 25% and over 15% of the population has no formal schooling;

  • Healthcare challenges: long distances to health facilities; low adherence to prescribed medications; high comorbidities with chronic infectious diseases make clinical management complex.

  • Screening and follow-up: conducted screenings through household visits, workplace screenings, and health education campaigns by community caregivers (CCGs) and in collaboration with the provincial Department of Health; established health teams of a professional nurse or doctor and CCG to provide clinical support at public health clinics and community follow-up by CCGs;

  • Workforce development: provided trainings on DM and HTN to CCGs; equipped CCGs with digital blood pressures and glucometers, as well as bicycles for reaching patients; trained clinicians and health professionals on diagnostics, clinical support, and ongoing follow-up at public health clinics;

  • Clinical and non-clinical patient support: established Central Chronic Medicine Dispensing Distribution system to enable patients to be able to pick up their medications closer to their community; hosted support/adherence groups to provide education on the importance of medication adherence, healthy nutrition and exercise, and discussing problems such as medication side effects with providers.

USA
Hennepin County, Minnesota July 2016 to September 2018
  • Target population: North Minneapolis, where the population is 50% African American, 20% Asian, 15% Caucasian, and 15% Hispanic/Other;

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: 40% of households are at or below the 200% poverty level; unemployment is 21.6% among working age adults;

  • Healthcare challenges: low trust in local health systems by patients; poor access to high-quality education, healthcare and nutritious foods; inadequate data integration of EMR records across community healthcare sites.

  • Follow-up: community paramedics (CPs) and/or CHWs visited patients to provide wrap-around care, including medication management, health education, food/cooking demonstrations, home safety checks, and broader support for social needs (eg, insurance, care coordination, transportation, housing);

  • Workforce development: hired and trained CHWs and CPs to work in providing home-based care for high-risk patients, leveraging the medical expertise and ambulatory primary care capacity of CPs alongside the cultural context and language skills of CHW;

  • Clinical and non-clinical patient support: coordinated home-based care with clinic-based service team of doctors, nurses, pharmacists, clinical care coordinator, and diabetes educators; established a full-service grocery store with linkages to an interdisciplinary wellness team (eg, CHWs, nutritionist, pharmacy liaison, coordinator) and a Wellness Resource Centre

  • Community-based activities: community or CHW-led activities offered by Oak Park community centre or other community spaces, including healthy eating education sessions, food demonstrations, grocery store tours, walking/exercise programmes, nutritious family meals.

Ramsey County, Minnesota June 2016 to September 2018
  • Target population: patients receiving care at Minnesota Community Care (MCC) clinics in Saint Paul, Minnesota;

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: 97% of MCC patients live below the 200% federal poverty line; 30%–65% are non-English speaking;

  • Healthcare challenges: Data systems between hospitals and MCC clinics not well integrated.

  • Follow-up: CPs and/or CHWs visited patients at home 1–4 times per month, monitoring health status, reinforcing clinic education, and addressing social determinants of health (eg, CHW-led patient empowerment and connecting to community resources); tailored frequency of in-home visits to patient care plans and based on trends in clinical targets for blood pressure and A1c;

  • Technologies for care coordination: used Pathways tool from Care Coordination Systems to ensure coordinated care and updates from CHWs and CPs and clinic-based care teams for patients;

  • Workforce development: hired and trained CHWs and CPs to provide in-home care and linkages to clinic-based providers in MCC;

  • Community-based activities: developed and implemented a nutrition-focused programme, in both English and Spanish, wherein sessions focused on nutrition education, effects of non-nutrition factors on blood sugar, and grocery store tours highlighting ways to shop for healthy and affordable foods.

Rice County, Minnesota September 2016 to October 2018
  • Target population: patients receiving care or associated with HealthFinders Collaborative, Inc (HFC).

  • Sociodemographic characteristics: Past HFC patients were comprised of 60% Latino immigrants and 25% Somali refugees.

  • Healthcare challenges: HFC primarily serves uninsured patients or those with public insurance plans;

  • Technologies for care coordination: designed EMR system to document home visits within patient medical records; employed electronic tools for improving contact with patients, including short message service (SMS)/text-based appointment reminders and education programmes (ie, Care Message);

  • Workforce development: leveraged pre-existing community networks to develop clinic-community care coordination through the use of frontline health workers (including CHW and CP care teams), community wellness programmes, and added services (eg, mental health services, wellness programmes, and on-site lab for easier access to diagnostic tests);

  • Community-based activities: offered community-based programming tailored to linguistic and cultural needs of participants, including monthly and quarterly diabetes management classes; Somali Health series; patient advocacy; and Pura Vida programmes (ie, wellness and education programmes including exercise classes, local walks and runs, cooking and nutrition classes, etc); partnered with Northfield Hospital and Clinics to expand CP programme; collaborating with the Mayo Clinic and Allina Health System to extend model beyond NCDs (eg, ob/gyn care for Somali populations).

More detailed descriptions of HealthRise interventions in each country, as provided by grantees and compiled by Abt Associates, are published elsewhere.36

CHW, community health worker; DM, diabetes mellitus; HTN, hypertension; NCD, non-communicable disease.