Pilot Study of a New Model for Managing Hypertension in an Uninsured Population

For millions of uninsured Americans who have hypertension, quality medical care is too expensive to access with any regularity. The Community-based Chronic Disease Management (CCDM) Clinic was created to deliver clinical care for medically uninsured patients in a setting of low resources and high ne...

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Main Authors: James Sanders, Clare Guse, Berthrand C. Onuoha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-01-01
Series:Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2150131912451742
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spelling doaj-f66f6aac7bd64310a88999ea9d52385a2020-11-25T02:52:41ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Primary Care & Community Health2150-13192150-13272013-01-01410.1177/2150131912451742Pilot Study of a New Model for Managing Hypertension in an Uninsured PopulationJames Sanders0Clare Guse1Berthrand C. Onuoha2 Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USAFor millions of uninsured Americans who have hypertension, quality medical care is too expensive to access with any regularity. The Community-based Chronic Disease Management (CCDM) Clinic was created to deliver clinical care for medically uninsured patients in a setting of low resources and high need. CCDM’s model melds nurse-led teams with the chronic disease model and uses evidence-based clinical decision protocols. This new model of care differs from traditional models. CCDM conducted a nonrandomized prospective trial of the effectiveness of this new model of care. The intervention included free education, medications, and laboratory investigations. For hypertensives treated for 6 months and 1 year, national benchmark goals were reached for 45% (50/110, P < .00005) and 56% (43/77, P < .00005) of patients, respectively, compared with 18% and 22% being at goal at initial presentation. The CCDM model may have implications for health service delivery in insured populations as well. Further study is warranted.https://doi.org/10.1177/2150131912451742
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Sanders
Clare Guse
Berthrand C. Onuoha
spellingShingle James Sanders
Clare Guse
Berthrand C. Onuoha
Pilot Study of a New Model for Managing Hypertension in an Uninsured Population
Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
author_facet James Sanders
Clare Guse
Berthrand C. Onuoha
author_sort James Sanders
title Pilot Study of a New Model for Managing Hypertension in an Uninsured Population
title_short Pilot Study of a New Model for Managing Hypertension in an Uninsured Population
title_full Pilot Study of a New Model for Managing Hypertension in an Uninsured Population
title_fullStr Pilot Study of a New Model for Managing Hypertension in an Uninsured Population
title_full_unstemmed Pilot Study of a New Model for Managing Hypertension in an Uninsured Population
title_sort pilot study of a new model for managing hypertension in an uninsured population
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
issn 2150-1319
2150-1327
publishDate 2013-01-01
description For millions of uninsured Americans who have hypertension, quality medical care is too expensive to access with any regularity. The Community-based Chronic Disease Management (CCDM) Clinic was created to deliver clinical care for medically uninsured patients in a setting of low resources and high need. CCDM’s model melds nurse-led teams with the chronic disease model and uses evidence-based clinical decision protocols. This new model of care differs from traditional models. CCDM conducted a nonrandomized prospective trial of the effectiveness of this new model of care. The intervention included free education, medications, and laboratory investigations. For hypertensives treated for 6 months and 1 year, national benchmark goals were reached for 45% (50/110, P < .00005) and 56% (43/77, P < .00005) of patients, respectively, compared with 18% and 22% being at goal at initial presentation. The CCDM model may have implications for health service delivery in insured populations as well. Further study is warranted.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2150131912451742
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