Study Information

dbGaP Study Accession: phs002575

NIH Institute/Center: NCATS

RADx Data Program: RADx-UP

DOI: 10.60773/dp9b-t353

Release Date: 08/29/2023

Study Description: Racial/ethnic minority, low socioeconomic status (SES), and rural populations suffer profound health inequities across a wide variety of diseases and conditions, as well as a disproportionate burden of the negative health consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. Latinos make up ~14% of the Utah population vs. ~40% of Utah's COVID-19 cases, and the case rate is over 3-fold higher in neighborhoods characterized by high vs. low deprivation. The case rate in Utah per 100,000 is 665 among Whites vs. 3,503 among Latinos, 3,470 among Pacific Islanders, 1,727 among African Americans, and 1,569 among Native Americans. Community Health Centers (CHCs) are optimal settings for addressing the screening and uptake of COVID-19 testing among underserved populations. Twelve Utah CHC systems participated in SCALE-UP Utah. Their 39 primary care clinics served over 115,000 unique patients annually (37% Latino, 11% Native American, 61% <100% poverty level, 51% uninsured, and 49% of clinics are in rural/frontier areas). SCALE-UP Utah was a state-wide, pragmatic, multilevel intervention study. The long-term objective was to increase the reach, uptake, and sustainability of COVID-19 screening and testing among underserved populations. The team had existing infrastructure and shovel ready clinic and population health management (PHM) interventions ready for implementation. SCALE-UP Utah built on long standing, funded partnerships, and implemented and evaluated three practical, feasible, scalable multi-level interventions to increase COVID-19 screening and uptake in Utah CHCs. Interventions leveraged widely adopted Health Information Technology (HIT) at the point of care, text messaging, and patient navigation. SCALE-UP Utah coordinated and synergized existing infrastructure and resources across the state, as well as strengthened infrastructure and data networks for rapid deployment of new screening and testing protocols, vaccination programs, etc. The project employed a rapid cycle research approach in which interventions were tested on a small scale, using short time frames (e.g., <1 month) and cyclical evaluation cycles. A critical aspect of these rapid-research cycles was that change can be quickly tested on a small scale, and then disseminated to other clinics/patients. The interventions were readily available for adoption by other low-resource healthcare settings; and, the data advanced population health and implementation science. The specific aims were: 1. Implement and evaluate clinic and PHM interventions for increasing the uptake of COVID-19 testing among CHC patients across Utah. 2. Examine implementation effectiveness outcomes, as well as characteristics of both clinics and patients that may influence intervention effects and implementation outcomes.

Updated Date: 04/17/2024

Principal Investigator: Hess, Rachel

Has Data Files: Yes

Study Domain: Social Determinants of Health; Screening Testing; Testing Rate/Uptake; Community Outreach Programs

Data Collection Method: Survey

Keywords: Testing Disparities; Uninsured Population; COVID Communication via Text Messaging; Native American Population

Study Design: Interventional/Clinical Trial

Multi-Center Study: TRUE

Study Sites: Association for Utah Community Health

Data Types: Electronic Medical Records; Questionnaires/Surveys

Study Start Date: 09/23/2020

Study End Date: 02/28/2023

Species: Human Data

Estimated Cohort Size: 83000

Study Population Focus: Rural Communities; Adults; African American; Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander; Hispanic and Latino; Lower Socioeconomic Status (SES) Population; Racial and Ethnic Minorities

Study Website URL: https://ctv.veeva.com/study/scale-up-utah-community-academic-partnership-to-address-covid-19-vaccination-rates-among-utah-commu

ClinicalTrials.gov URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04939519; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04939532

Acknowledgement Statement: This study was supported through funding, 3UL1TR002538-03S4, for the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) as part of the RADx-UP program. This project is part of the RADx UP program which aims to ensure that all Americans have access to COVID-19 testing, with a focus on communities most affected by the pandemic. We are sincerely grateful to our primary collaborators on this project, the Association for Utah Community Health, the Utah Department of Health, and our participating clinics. Additionally, we are grateful to our participants who made this study possible. Approved users should acknowledge the provision of data access by dbGaP for accession phs002575.v1.p1, and the NIH RADx Data Hub. Approved users should also acknowledge the specific version(s) of the dataset(s) obtained from the NIH RADx Data Hub.

Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) Number: PA-20-135

NIH Grant or Contract Number(s): 3UL1TR002538-03S4

Consent/Data Use Limitations: General Research Use

Study Documents
Study Documents Table
Document
Document Name
File Size
Download
Study Documentationphs002575_Project 35_Clinic Workflow Survey.pdf59.08 KB
Study Documentationphs002575_Project 35_Protocol.pdf88.63 KB
READMEproject35_README.html281.02 KB
Data Files
Total Files: 6
Data Files: 2
Metadata Files: 2
Dictionary Files: 2
Study Datasets Table
File Name
File Type
File Format(s)
# of Records
# of Variables
Metadata
Dictionary
project35_DATA_transformcopy.csvTabular Data - Harmonizedcsv217242
project35_DATA_origcopy.csvTabular Data - Non-harmonizedcsv217242