Barbershop-Facilitated Community-to-Clinic Linkage Implementation Program: Rationale and Protocol for a Novel Program to Prevent Hypertension Among Black Men

Author:

Ravenell Joseph12ORCID,Green Tanisha1,Arabadjian Milla13,Schoenthaler Antoinette1,Ogedegbe Olugbenga12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Population Health, NYU Grossman School of Medicine , New York, New York , USA

2. Department of Medicine, NYU Grossman School of Medicine , New York, New York , USA

3. Department of Foundations of Medicine, NYU Long Island School of Medicine , Mineola, New York , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Black men in the United States have higher hypertension (HTN) prevalence than other groups, largely due to adverse social determinants of health, including poor healthcare access. The Community-to-Clinic Linkage Implementation Program (CLIP) is effective for HTN screening in Black-owned barbershops. However, its effect on HTN prevention among Black men is untested. Here, we describe the rationale and study protocol for the development and testing of a barbershop facilitation (BF) strategy, with trained Community Health Workers, to implement and scale CLIP for HTN prevention in Black men. Methods The study is part of the American Heart Association (AHA)-funded RESTORE (Addressing Social Determinants to Prevent Hypertension) Health Equity Research Network. The study is tri-phasic: (i) pre-implementation—qualitative examination of factors affecting adoption of CLIP and development of BF strategy, (ii) implementation—cluster randomized control trial to test the effectiveness of CLIP with and without BF. We will partner with 20 barbershops and enroll 420 Black men with elevated blood pressure (BP)/Stage 1 HTN (2017 ACC/AHA HTN guidelines). Outcomes include reduction in BP, rate of CLIP adoption and linkage to care, and incidence of Stage 2 HTN. The study time frame is 12 months, (iii) post-implementation—we will evaluate program sustainability (6 months post-trial conclusion) and cost-effectiveness (up to 10 years). Conclusions This study harnesses community-based resources to address HTN prevention in Black men, who are more adversely impacted by HTN than other groups. It has major policy relevance for health departments and other stakeholders to address HTN prevention in Black communities. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT05447962.

Funder

American Heart Association-funded Health Equity Research Network

American Heart Association

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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