Atrial fibrillation is the most common sustained cardiac arrhythmia in adults. Due to the asymptomatic and paroxysmal nature (randomly and shortly occurring of atrial fibrillation, and can therefore remain unnoticed) of atrial fibrillation. Atrial fibrillation increases the risk of stroke five fold if left untreated. Screening in old populations above age 65 years is helpful to find more atrial fibrillation cases. However, screening for atrial fibrillation is not well implemented in China. Thus, this project aims to promote atrial fibrillation screening in primary care centers in China. We will develop an intervention program (SEARCH-AF) and examine the effects (including the clinical effects and implementation effects) of program.
Six health care centers in Guangzhou China will be included. We will adopt a stepped-wedge randomized trial design. Two health care centers will be randomly selected to receive the SEARCH-AF program at each step (a total of three steps). The SEARCH-AF program will include opportunistic screening among those who aged 65 or above and screening promoting strategies. The A total of 4800 old adults will be screened for atrial fibrillation using a handheld single-lead ECG tool upon their visit to family doctor, with 800 for each health care center. The promoting strategy will be developed based on the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research and include leadership engagement, policy support, providing screening resources, staff training on atrial fibrillation screening and management. The whole study will last for 18 months. We will examine the intervention effects including clinical effects (atrial fibrillation detection rate, anticoagulation rate, atrial fibrillation related hospital visits, and stroke related end points) and implementation effects (cost-effectiveness of the intervention, compliance to atrial fibrillation screening ).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
4,800
SEARCH-AF program will include opportunistic screening among old adults during primary care visits and promoting strategies. Promoting strategies will be developed based on the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research framework which may include leadership engagement, policy support, providing screening resources, atrial fibrillation screening and management training. General practitioner or nurse in each health care center will implement point-on-care screening. The intervention will last for six months and followed up for another six months.
Atrial fibrillation detection rate
Rate of newly detected atrial fibrillation. The data will be collected via medical records (primary care medical system) review and patient interview.
Time frame: End of the intervention (T0), three-month (T1) and six-month (T2) after the intervention.
Anticoagulation rate
Anticoagulation rate among the newly detected atrial fibrillation cases. The data will be collected via medical records (primary care medical system) review and patient interview.
Time frame: Three-month and six-month post the intervention
Cost-effectiveness
Cost-effectiveness refers to the cost of screening for one atrial fibrillation and preventing for one stroke, respectively. It will be assessed using cost-effectiveness ratio. The cost of intervention will include the direct screening cost (screening tool, manpower for carrying out the screening, training on screening, leaflet etc), cost on anticoagulation (expense on oral anticoagulants) and stroke treatment (in-hospital and out-of-hospital cost on stroke treatment). The cost of control group will include the cost on anticoagulation(expense on oral anticoagulants) and stroke treatment (in-hospital and out-of-hospital cost on stroke treatment ). All the cost data will be collected using a patient-reported information sheet.
Time frame: Six-month post the intervention
Atrial fibrillation associated events
Including stroke, bleeding events associated with anticoagulation (referred to bleeding that requires in-hospital treatment), and death. The data will be collected via medical records (primary care medical system) and patient interview.
Time frame: Three-month and six-month post the intervention
Atrial fibrillation related medical resource consumption
Including the number of in-hospital and out-of-hospital visits due to atrial fibrillation. Such data will be collected using a patient-reported information sheet.
Time frame: Three-month and six-month post the intervention
Compliance with atrial fibrillation screening
Compliance with atrial fibrillation screening refers to the degree of general practitioner/nurse perform screening as requested during the follow-up. It will be calculated by the number of practitioners/nurses who remained in the screening during follow-up/ the initial number of practitioner/nurse performing the screening. Such data will be collected using a practitioner/nurse-reported information sheet.
Time frame: Three-month and six-month post the intervention
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