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Mobilizing Community Hypertension Access Pilot

NCT07547345 · Rush University Medical Center
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Official title
Live Healthy Chicago - Community Pilot
About this study
Uncontrolled hypertension is a leading contributor to cardiovascular disease and preventable morbidity and mortality in the United States, with disproportionate burden among underserved populations. In Chicago, structural inequities, limited access to primary care, and mistrust in healthcare systems contribute to significant disparities in hypertension control, particularly among Black residents on the West and South Sides. Community-based care delivery models have demonstrated success in improving blood pressure outcomes by engaging individuals in trusted, non-traditional healthcare settings. The Live Healthy Chicago (LHC) Community Pilot is a prospective, community-based pilot study designed to evaluate the feasibility, effectiveness, and economic impact of a pharmacist-led hypertension management intervention embedded within community-based organizations. The study will enroll approximately 200 adults with uncontrolled hypertension identified through community health worker (CHW)-led screening and outreach efforts at participating sites, including churches and organizations providing social services. Participants will receive a 3-month intervention delivered by a mobile clinical team consisting of CHWs, a pharmacist, and a registered nurse (RN). CHWs will conduct outreach, facilitate recruitment, provide health education, and support care navigation. RNs will collect baseline clinical data, provide counseling, support medication adherence, and conduct follow-up assessments. Pharmacists will perform medication reconciliation and manage antihypertensive therapy, including initiation and titration of medications under a collaborative practice agreement with supervising physicians. Participants will be followed for 12 weeks, with regular in-person or telehealth visits to monitor blood pressure, assess medication adherence, and address social determinants of health. Home blood pressure monitoring will be encouraged, and participants may be provided with blood pressure cuffs when available. Data collection will occur at baseline and at 3-month follow-up and will include blood pressure measurements, medication adherence (via validated questionnaires), medical history, social determinants of health, and participant-reported outcomes such as satisfaction and intervention acceptability. The primary effectiveness outcome is change in systolic blood pressure over the 3-month intervention period, including the proportion of participants achieving a clinically meaningful reduction (≥10 mmHg). Feasibility and acceptability outcomes include recruitment, retention, and participant satisfaction. Economic analyses will estimate the cost per participant and model potential cost savings associated with reduced healthcare utilization, including emergency department visits and hospitalizations. This pilot study aims to generate preliminary evidence to support scalable, community-based hypertension care models that improve access, reduce disparities, and enhance chronic disease management in underserved urban populations.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: * Adults 18 years or older * Record of two blood pressure readings of SBP\>130 on two separate occasions (days) within the past 3 months Exclusion Criteria: * Person is receiving dialysis * Person has had a heart or kidney transplant * Person is pregnant
Study design
Enrollment target: 200 participants
Allocation: na
Masking: none
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2026-02-20
Estimated completion: 2027-03
Last updated: 2026-04-23
Interventions
Behavioral: Community-Based Multidisciplinary Hypertension Management Program
Primary outcomes
  • Change in Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP) (Baseline to 3 months (12 weeks))
Sponsor
Rush University Medical Center · other
Contacts & investigators
ContactElizabeth Lynch, PhD · contact · Elizabeth_Lynch@rush.edu · 312-563-2254
ContactRebecca Dawar, MPH · contact · Rebecca_Dawar@rush.edu · 312-942-8571
InvestigatorElizabeth Lynch, PhD · principal_investigator, Rush University Medical Center
All locations (1)
Rush University Medical CenterRecruiting
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Mobilizing Community Hypertension Access Pilot · TrialPath