Design and implementation of a Pacific intervention to increase uptake of urate-lowering therapy for gout: a study protocol

Author:

Ofanoa MalakaiORCID,Ofanoa Samuela MalakaiORCID,Heather MaryannORCID,Tu’akoi SiobhanORCID,Lutui Hinamaha,Dalbeth NicolaORCID,Grey CorinaORCID,van der Werf BertORCID,Goodyear-Smith FelicityORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Gout is a painful chronic disease which disrupts work and family life and can lead to chronic joint damage. Pacific people in Aotearoa/New Zealand experience significant inequities, with over three times the gout prevalence of the non-Pacific non-Māori populations. Pacific people receive less regular urate-lowering drugs to prevent gout flare-ups, and have nine times the hospitalisation from gout compared with non-Pacific non-Māori people. Rates for Indigenous Māori lie between Pacific and non-Pacific non-Māori. A long-established Collective comprising community members from the Pacific People’s Health Advisory Group, clinical staff from the Pacific Practice-Based Research Network, and University of Auckland researchers have identified that improving Pacific urate-lowering therapy use as the research question of prime importance for improved health outcomes of Pacific people in South Auckland. Building on the existing knowledge, this study aims to develop, implement and evaluate a novel innovative intervention to improve the uptake of urate-lowering therapy by Pacific patients with gout. Methods Three-phase mixed methods co-design study using the Fa’afaletui research framework following the STROBE statement. Phase1 is observational times series of prevalence of patients with gout, proportion with urate blood-level monitoring and use of urate-lowering medication over past 5 years. In Phase 2 the Collective will workshop new interventions to address previous uptake barriers, using culturally-appropriate Talanga communications with results synthesised in line with Kakala principles. The designed intervention will be implemented and process and outcome evaluations conducted. Finally, an implementation framework will be produced to facilitate further roll-out. Discussion The study aims to enhance health and reduce inequities for Pacific people, contribute to creation of Pacific health knowledge and translation of research findings into Pacific health gains. Potential longer-term impact is a gout-management pathway for use throughout Aotearoa/New Zealand. Māori have similar issues with high gout prevalence and low urate-lowering therapy use hence the intervention is likely to translate to Māori healthcare. The project will contribute to Pacific research capacity and capability-building as well as general upskilling of community and practice members involved in the co-design processes. Trial registration The Australian New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry is in process, request number 38206, 1-09-2021.

Funder

Health Research Council of New Zealand

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference39 articles.

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2. Bursill D, Dalbeth N. What is the evidence for treat-to-target serum urate in gout? Curr Rheumatol Rep. 2018;20(3):11.

3. Jackson G, Dalbeth N, Te Karu L, et al. Variation in gout care in Aotearoa New Zealand: a national analysis of quality markers. NZ Med J. 2014;127(1404):37–47.

4. Dalbeth N, House ME, Horne A, et al. The experience and impact of gout in Maori and Pacific people: a prospective observational study. Clin Rheumatol. 2013;32(2):247–51.

5. Dalbeth N, Dowell T, Gerard C, et al. Gout in Aotearoa New Zealand: the equity crisis continues in plain sight. N Z Med J. 2018;131(1485):8–12.

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