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This study examines the impact of a multi-level intervention aiming to improve telehealth access for low-income patients managing chronic health conditions, such as hypertension and diabetes. The multi-level intervention includes clinic-level practice facilitation and patient-level digital health coaching.
ACCTIVATE is a multi-level intervention (including practice facilitation and patient digital coaching) that aims to tackle patient-level and clinic-level barriers to increase the equitable use of telehealth tools for chronic disease management. Direct patient support via digital coaching can meet the needs of patients who have been left behind in the digital divide. For those with reduced digital literacy and low access to smartphones and broadband, this resource can increase their confidence in using digital technologies and engaging in virtual care. Additionally, primary care clinic support through practice facilitation can empower team members to address racial/ethnic disparities in telehealth use through equitable screening/offering of digital technologies, resources to prepare patients for virtual chronic disease management, and consistent review of telehealth equity data. The investigators hypothesize that this multi-level intervention will improve patient control of chronic health conditions (i.e., glycosylated hemoglobin) as well as digital literacy, while also increasing patient and clinician engagement with patient portals, telehealth video visits and remote monitoring. Aim 1: Assess the impact of the multi-level intervention on clinical outcomes at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months. Our working hypotheses are that patients randomized to receive digital coaching (vs. usual care) will experience a greater change in mean glycosylated hemoglobin A1C, both overall and among Black and Latinx patients. Clinics randomized to practice facilitation (vs. usual care) will experience a greater clinic-level change in mean glycosylated hemoglobin A1C, both overall and among their Black and Latinx populations. Aim 2: Assess the impact of the multi-level intervention on process outcomes related to digital literacy, engagement in care, and health IT utilization at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months. The investigators hypothesize that randomization to digital coaching (vs. usual care) will increase patient portal use, digital literacy, and visit show rate, overall and among Black and Latinx patients. Randomization to practice facilitation (vs. usual care) will increase clinic-level use of telehealth video visits and patient-portal communication, overall and with Black and Latinx patients. Aim 3: Conduct a mixed methods evaluation of intervention implementation outcomes. Quantitative engagement data, direct observations of intervention sessions, and stakeholder interviews will characterize implementation outcomes and factors necessary to integrate the multi-level intervention into clinical operations, applying the RE-AIM implementation science framework.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital (ZSFG) & SF Department of Public Health (DPH)
San Francisco, California, United States
Start Date
November 4, 2024
Primary Completion Date
September 1, 2028
Completion Date
September 1, 2028
Last Updated
January 6, 2026
600
ESTIMATED participants
Digital Health Coaching (Patient-Level Intervention)
OTHER
Practice Facilitation (Clinic-Level Intervention)
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco
Collaborators
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
Neither the United States Government nor Clareo Health make any warranties regarding the data. Check ClinicalTrials.gov frequently for updates.
View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT07296484