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Million Hearts Preventing 1 million heart attacks and strokes in 5 years
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What is Million Hearts? Goal: Prevent 1 million heart attacks and strokes over the next 5 years Engage public and private sector partners in a coordinated approach to: –Reduce the number of people who need treatment –Improve the quality of treatment for those who need it –Maximize current investments in cardiovascular health
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Heart disease and strokes are leading killers in the U.S. Cause 1 of every 3 deaths More than 2 million heart attacks and strokes occur every year; 800,000 die –Leading cause of preventable death among people <65 Treatment accounts for about $1 of every $6 spent on health care Accounts for the largest single portion of racial disparities in life expectancy
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Status of the ABCS Aspirin People at increased risk of cardiovascular disease who are taking aspirin 47% Blood pressure People with hypertension who have adequately controlled blood pressure 46% Cholesterol People with high cholesterol who have adequately controlled hyperlipidemia 33% Smoking People trying to quit smoking who get help 23% Source: MMWR: Million Hearts: Strategies to Reduce the Prevalence of Leading Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors --- United States, 2011, Early Release, Vol. 60
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Key components of Million Hearts Clinical Prevention – improving care of the ABCS through: –Focus – simplify and align quality measures; emphasize importance of improved care of the ABCS –Health IT – use electronic health records to improve care and enable quality improvement through clinical decision support, patient reminders, registries, and technical assistance –Care innovations – team-based care, interventions to promote medication adherence Community prevention – reducing the need for treatment through: –Prevention of tobacco use –Improved nutrition – decrease sodium and artificial trans fat consumption
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Community prevention Tobacco control Tobacco is leading preventable agent of death Strengthen tobacco control and reduce smoking by discouraging smoking initiation and encouraging cessation –Warn people about harms of tobacco use through package labeling, mass media, and other measures –Create smoke-free public places and workplaces Comprehensive tobacco control programs are most effective –Synergies between individual program elements
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Reasons for hope: Reduced smoking in New York City 18.9% 11% % of New York City Smokers 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 1993 19941995 19961997 19981999 200020012002 2003 200420052006 2007 18.3% 17.5% 350,000 fewer adult smokers >100,000 fewer smoking-related deaths in future years 15% 19.2% 21.5% 18% 2008 8.5% 16.9% 15.8%
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Community prevention Reducing sodium intake Most Americans consume far too much sodium, which increases risks of hypertension and cardiovascular disease Most (~80%) sodium comes from processed/restaurant foods, which makes it difficult for Americans to limit sodium consumption Federal procurement guidelines and school food standards include a focus on sodium reduction FDA/USDA have issued a request for information on sodium reduction CDC is increasing public and professional education about sodium NHANES will begin collecting information on sodium consumption
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Community prevention Eliminating artificial trans fat Trans fat increases LDL cholesterol, decreases HDL cholesterol, increases risk of heart attacks –IOM: reduce intake to as close to zero as possible Replacing artificial trans fat with heart-healthy oils is feasible and does not increase the cost or change the flavor or texture of foods Since FDA began requiring listing of trans fat content on food labels, the food industry has voluntarily reformulated foods –Americans’ trans fat consumption has decreased by at least half
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What can be done In the community Retailers –Offer blood pressure monitoring and educational resources; focus on improving ABCS care in retail clinics Government –Support community and systems transformation to reduce tobacco use and improve nutrition, including smoke-free policies and food procurement standards; provide data for action; expand coverage for the uninsured Foundations –Support consumer and provider outreach and education Advocacy groups –Monitor progress toward goal and promote actions that prevent heart attacks and strokes
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New CDC Community Supports Community Transformation Grants (CTG) –>$100 M in prevention grants –~60 Communities –All communities will address tobacco, physical activity, nutrition, clinical preventive services – specifically to control HTN, HBC –Look for announcement of communities next week.
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National Dissemination and Support for CTG’s Dissemination Networks APHA Asian Pacific Partners for Empowerment and Advocacy Community Anti-Drug Coalition National Farm to School Network at Occidental College Acceleration Networks –American Lung Association –National REACH coalition –YMCA of the USA
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Pharmacy Outreach Program Objectives –Grow and strengthen community of orgs focusing on HTN –↑ awareness that poor adherence to HTN meds is weak link in CVD risk reduction – ↑ # of pharmacists actively engaging in counseling pts on adherence –↑ # of pts who are discussing HTN meds with their pharmacist.
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Million Hearts Leadership Co-led by CDC and CMS Quarterly reporting to HHS All of HHS Executive Director –Janet Wright MD FACC –CDC Medical Officer housed at CMS Innovations Center
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Operating Values How we shall work together and with others? Boundarilessness Speed and Agility Unconditional Teamwork Valuing Innovation Customer Focus
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The Three Part Aim Better Health for the Population Better Care for Individuals Lower Cost Through Improvement
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Reasons for hope HRSA Health Centers Collaborative Study increased daily aspirin intake from 53% to 67% after intervention KP Colorado high Blood Pressure and Cholesterol Management Program improved from having 26% of patients with cholesterol under control to having 73% of patients with cholesterol under control Rhode Island Cardiovascular Chronic Care Collaborative saw an increase in blood pressure control among participants from 20% to 60% Work by Medicaid Massachusetts yielded a drop from a smoking rate of over 38% to a smoking rate of 28% in 2.5 years
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The question is not whether superb performance and sustainability is possible, the question is whether it is possible at scale. Getting to Scale
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“I think when people look back at our time, they will be amazed at one thing more than any other. It is this – that we do know more about ourselves now than people did in the past, but that very little of this knowledge has been put into effect.” Doris Lessing Getting to Scale
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Eleven Lessons from the Best 1.They have shared, crisp, public aims, owned by leadership, and they’re rabid about them. 2.They welcome everyone. (Unleash) 3.They get to the field. (It’s not a web site.) 4.Their work is rooted in actions and transactions. (Rhythm) 5.They are “brutally opportunistic.” (Jazz) 6.They play well with levers. 7.They tend to affection. (Value) 8.They have a shared story and they use the language of creation (not avoidance). 9.They go broad and deep. 10.They examine and revise their rules base. 11.The patient is in the room…always.
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Eleven Lessons from the Best 1.They have shared, crisp, public aims, owned by leadership, and they’re rabid about them. 2.They welcome everyone. (Unleash) 3.They get to the field. (It’s not a web site.) 4.Their work is rooted in actions and transactions. (Rhythm) 5.They are “brutally opportunistic.” (Jazz) 6.They play well with levers. 7.They tend to affection. (Value) 8.They have a shared story and they use the language of creation (not avoidance). 9.They go broad and deep. 10.They examine and revise their rules base. 11.The patient is in the room…always.
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Clinical prevention Focus on ABCS Improving management of ABCS can prevent more deaths than other clinical preventive services Increasing utilization of these simple interventions could save more than 100,000 lives a year –Patients reduce risk of heart attack or stroke by taking aspirin as appropriate –Treating high blood pressure and high cholesterol substantially and quickly reduces mortality among high-risk patients –Even brief smoking cessation advice from clinicians doubles likelihood of successful quit attempt – use of cessation medications increases quit rates further
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Improved cardiovascular care could save 100,000 lives/year in U.S. Source: Farley TA, et al. Am J Prev Med 2010;38:600-9. S moking cessation B lood Pressure control C holesterol control A spirin prophylaxis
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Clinical prevention Increasing focus Improving ABCS is top priority Aligning incentives, communication, clinical measurement, and reporting by physicians, health care facilities, and health care systems Simple, consistent ABCS indicators into: –Physician Quality Reporting System, –EHR meaningful use criteria, community clinic measures, and guidelines from private-sector organizations –Medicare Part D & MA/PD Plan Ratings –Quality Improvement Organizations
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Clinical prevention Information technology HIT will enable health care providers and facilities to improve cardiovascular care and target intervention to patients in need of intensified care –Registries, EHR functions used at point of care Include clinical quality measures for hypertension and cholesterol control in Meaningful Use criteria –Can include routine assessment of cardiac risk; use of patient recall, reminders, decision support, order sets; and monitoring of medication adherence
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Clinical prevention Team-based approaches to care Team-based care can provide higher quality at lower cost –Allied health workers can provide support to physician-directed efforts Increasing use of effective ABCS care practices through support, evaluation, and rapid dissemination of innovations including –Team-based care –Patient-centered medical homes –Interventions to promote adherence
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Pharmacists can be key partners in CVD prevention CVD Risk FactorReduction Systolic/diastolic blood pressure–8.1/–3.8 mm Hg Total cholesterol–17.4 mg/L LDL cholesterol–13.4 mg/L Smoking23% reduction Care from pharmacists* is associated with significant reductions in cardiovascular disease risk *Interventions exclusively conducted by a pharmacist or implemented in collaboration with physicians or nurses; may include patient educational interventions, patient reminder systems, measurement of CVD risk factors, medication management and feedback to physician, and/or educational intervention to health care professionals. Source: Santschi V, et al. Arch Intern Med 2011;171:1441-53.
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What can be done In the medical system Health care providers –Focus on prevention of heart disease and stroke; improve care of ABCS; use health IT, including decision supports and registries, to drive quality improvements Pharmacists –Monitor medication refill patterns; engage doctors and patients in managing health Insurers –Include ABCS in performance measures; collect and share data for quality improvement; empower consumers Individuals –Take aspirin, if appropriate; take blood pressure and cholesterol medications as prescribed; if you smoke, quit
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How will you help?
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Monitoring progress of Million Hearts Population MetricBaseline2017 Aspirin for those at high risk 1 ~50%65% Blood pressure control 2 ~50%65% Cholesterol control 2 ~33%65% Smoking prevalence 3 ~19%17% Average sodium intake 2 ~3.5g/day20% reduction Artificial trans fat intake 2 ~ 1% of calories50% reduction 1 As measured in NAMCS 2 As measured in NHANES 3 As measured in NHIS Note: Population-wide indicators – clinical performance goals higher
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Public sector support Administration on Aging Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Food and Drug Administration Health Resources and Services Administration Indian Health Service Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration National Institutes of Health, National Heart Lung and Blood Institute National Prevention Strategy National Quality Strategy
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Private sector support American Heart Association America’s Health Insurance Plans American Medical Association American Nurses Association American Pharmacists’ Association and the American Pharmacists’ Association Foundation Kaiser Permanente The National Alliance of State Pharmacy Associations and the Alliance for Patient Medication Safety The National Community Pharmacists Association UnitedHealthcare Walgreens The Y
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http://millionhearts.hhs.gov
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Million Hearts Publications
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For More Information: www.millionhearts.hhs.gov
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