Patient-Centered Anticoagulation Self-Monitoring in Minority Patients
Thromboembolism, Blood Coagulation Disorders, Cardiovascular Disease
About this trial
This is an interventional health services research trial for Thromboembolism focused on measuring Anticoagulation, Anticoagulation Management, Self-Testing, Self-Management, Warfarin, Thromboembolism, Blood Coagulation Disorders, Health Disparities, Minorities, African American, Hispanic, Cardiovascular Disease, Models of Anticoagulation Care, Tele-Health, Home Self-Testing
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- > 21 years of age
- African American or Hispanic
- English speaking
- Has been on warfarin therapy > 3 months
- Plan to be on warfarin therapy > 12 months
- Willing ( or caregiver be willing) to do self-monitoring
- Willing to be randomized
Exclusion Criteria:
- Lack of access to a telephone
- Moderate to severe dementia (if lacks caregiver)
- Severe hearing impairment ( if lacks caregiver)
- Blindness ( if lacks caregiver)
- Life expectancy < 6 months
- Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome
Sites / Locations
- University of Illinois at Chicago
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Experimental
Anticoagulation Clinic
Patient Self-Monitoring
Usual care through pharmacist managed anticoagulation clinic Anticoagulation Clinic (control): subjects will have their INR tested in clinic monthly (or more frequently if clinically indicated) via the Coaguchek® point-of-care device (which is the standard of care in the Anticoagulation Clinic) and receive dosing instructions and standardized education related to warfarin by a clinical pharmacist who provides care in the Anticoagulation Clinic.
In home self-monitoring and pharmacist guided education Patient Self-Monitoring (intervention): entails 3 education sessions of 90-120 minutes each (week 0, week 2, week 4): 2 provided on site in clinic and 1 in the patient's home, during which, self-testing competency and barriers and facilitators to self-monitoring will be evaluated. Subjects will follow with weekly (or sooner, if clinically indicated) in-home self-monitoring and follow-up weekly phone calls over 6 months by clinical pharmacists to guide warfarin dosing and reinforce key educational messages.