Leveraging Behavioral Economics to Equitably Implement Cascade Screening in Individuals With Familial Hypercholesterolemia in Partnership With the Family Heart Foundation
Status: Completed
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Other
Study Type: Observational
SUMMARY
Design, refine, and pilot the two implementation approaches using behavioral economics and then seek further feedback prior to the proposed clinical trial, consistent with these recommendations. Aim 1. Co-design both implementation strategies using behavioral economics in partnership with the Family Heart Foundation and key partners from diverse backgrounds. Aim 2. Pilot strategies with 20 patients with high cholesterol and/or with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) to ascertain feasibility, acceptability, appropriateness.
Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:
• Patients with high cholesterol and/or FH (i.e., probands; Aim 1 Interviews, Aim 2 Pilot Testing Strategies, Aim 2 Interviews). Adults aged 18 and older with clinically diagnosed FH and/or high cholesterol who are treated within Penn Medicine.
• Family Members (Aim 2 Pilot Testing Strategies, Aim 2 Interviews). Adults aged 18 and older who have a family member who has been identified as a patient with high cholesterol and/or FH who is treated within Penn Medicine (i.e., family members of probands).
Locations
United States
Pennsylvania
University of Pennsylvania, Perelman School of Medicine
Philadelphia
Time Frame
Start Date:2022-07-20
Completion Date:2023-06-20
Participants
Target number of participants:22
Treatments
Qualitative Interviews
Conduct 15 interviews with patients diagnosed with FH. Interviews will be 30-60 minutes in length and will focus on how individuals understand cascade screening, barriers to engagement including reasons why individuals do and do not share health information with family members, and preferred approaches to engaging family members, with a focus on acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility of the planned implementation strategies. Interviewers will also attend to structural factors such as medical mistrust and experiences of racism in health care, and ask about preferences and logistics to incorporate preference into the future clinical trial design.
Penn-mediated implementation strategy
The Penn-mediated implementation strategy will be designed and then iterated upon during mini-pilots. As part of this strategy, the patients would receive text messages and/or emails containing information about FH and cascade screening from Penn Medicine. This would include a request for the patient to identify first-degree biological relatives. They would be given a choice of either contacting their family members directly or sharing their contact information so someone from Penn Medicine can contact them. If the proband chooses to contact their family members, they receive educational information to share with them. Family members would be offered FH screening at no cost by blood lipid panel.
Family Heart Foundation-mediated implementation strategy
The Family Heart Foundation (FHF)-mediated implementation strategy will be designed and then iterated upon during mini-pilots. As part of this strategy, the patient would be contacted by a FHF patient navigator. The patient navigator would ask to set up a time to talk to the patient to talk about options for contacting family members, introduce them to the services they can provide to the patient and/or family members and obtain some details about the patient's family. The patient would come up with a plan to either contact their family members directly or have the patient navigator contact them. Family members will be offered FH screening at no cost by blood lipid panel. The patient and/or family members will be able to contact the patient navigator at any time with questions.