Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6150765 | Contemporary Clinical Trials | 2016 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Obesity disproportionately affects rural residents in the United States, and primary care has the potential to fill a major gap in the provision of weight management services for rural communities. The objective of this cluster-randomized pragmatic trial is to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of three obesity treatment models in rural primary care: the Intensive Behavior Therapy fee-for-service (FFS) model reimbursed by Medicare, a team-based model that recognizes the patient-centered medical home (PCMH) as a preferred delivery approach, and the centralized disease management (DM) model, in which phone-based counseling is provided outside of the primary care practice. We hypothesize that the PCMH and DM treatments will be more effective than FFS in reducing weight at 24Â months. Thirty-six practices from the rural Midwestern U.S. are randomized to deliver one of the three interventions to 40 patients (NÂ =Â 1440) age 20 to 75 with a BMI 30-45Â kg/m2. In the FFS arm, primary care providers and their personnel counsel patients to follow evidence-based weight loss guidelines using the Medicare-designated treatment schedule. In the PCMH arm, patients receive a comprehensive weight management intervention delivered locally by practice personnel using a combination of in-person and phone-based group sessions. In the DM arm, the same intervention is delivered remotely by obesity treatment specialists via group conference calls. The primary outcome is weight loss at 24Â months. Additional measures include fasting glucose, lipids, quality of life indicators, and implementation process measures. Findings will illuminate effective obesity treatment intervention(s) in rural primary care.
Keywords
PCPCMSPABRHCRE-AIMPCMHFFSFQHCPrimary care providerPatient-Centered Medical HomeRuralLifestyle interventionDisease managementCenters for Medicare and Medicaid ServicesObesityFederally qualified health centerFee-for-serviceConsolidated Framework for Implementation ResearchBehavioral weight lossPrimary care
Related Topics
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Medicine and Dentistry
Medicine and Dentistry (General)
Authors
Christie A. Befort, Jeffrey J. VanWormer, Cyrus DeSouza, Edward F. Ellerbeck, Kim S. Kimminau, Allen Greiner, Byron Gajewski, Terry Huang, Michael G. Perri, Tera L. Fazzino, Danielle Christifano, Leslie Eiland, Andjela Drincic,