Reducing Disparities in Late Life Depression and Metabolic Syndrome



Status:Completed
Conditions:Depression, High Blood Pressure (Hypertension), High Cholesterol, Obesity Weight Loss, Endocrine, Diabetes
Therapuetic Areas:Cardiology / Vascular Diseases, Endocrinology, Psychiatry / Psychology
Healthy:No
Age Range:60 - Any
Updated:11/8/2014
Start Date:March 2011
End Date:December 2015
Contact:Steven K Rothschild, MD
Email:steven_k_rothschild@rush.edu
Phone:312 942 3476

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BRIGHTEN Heart: Reducing Disparities in Late Life Depression and Metabolic Syndrome

Linkages between depression and cardiovascular disease have been well documented. These
appear to be more than associations, and may reflect causal relationships through a number
of proposed pathways, including decreased physical activity, poor dietary habits, medication
non-adherence, and a direct impact on inflammatory mediators. Older adults are affected by
both depression and heart disease, with increased risk in African American and Latino
elderly.

The BRIGHTEN-Heart trial tests the hypothesis that an enhanced primary care delivery system
intervention which provides evidence-based, patient-centered mental health services
targeting depression and cardiovascular risk factors can reduce the risk of development of
cardiovascular disease in low-income elderly blacks and Hispanics. BRIGHTEN stands for
Bridging Resources of a Geriatric Health Team via Electronic Networking, and in this
intervention, specialty providers including geropsychologists, social workers, pharmacists,
nutritionists, chaplains, occupational therapists, and others collaborate via the internet
as a virtual team. The study will determine if such a virtual interdisciplinary clinical
team collaboration can reduce depression in older (age ≥ 65) minority adults with comorbid
depression and metabolic syndrome.

Chicago has been characterized as one of America's most segregated cities, with many
neighborhoods characterized by black and Hispanic populations living in concentrated pockets
of poverty. In addition to lowered socioeconomic status, these neighborhoods are also
characterized by remarkable health disparities relative to wealthier, predominantly white
neighborhoods only a few miles away. Disparities in access to health services contribute
to these poorer health outcomes, but are not wholly explanatory.

For cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of death in the US, both black and Hispanic
adults have elevated rates of many major risk factors including physical inactivity,
obesity, elevated levels of Fasting Blood Glucose, and dyslipidemia. Blacks also have
elevated rates of hypertension, and experience well-documented excess mortality rates.
Experts are anticipating that, given high prevalence of risk factors, most importantly the
metabolic syndrome, similar disparities in cardiovascular mortality may soon emerge for
Hispanics as well.

Beyond cardiovascular disease, these populations face psychosocial challenges such as
poverty, unemployment, societal racism, and high rates of major and traumatic life stress,
all of which can contribute to high rates of depression and anxiety symptoms. Even the
physical environment adds to the levels of stress: empty buildings that can become criminal
and drug havens, boarded up storefronts, lack of groceries providing access to fresh fruits
and vegetables (so-called "food deserts"). Disparities in access to health services, and
these environmental conditions, as well as personal and familial factors associated with
poverty are related to health disparity outcomes in complex ways that are only beginning to
be understood.

Linkages between depression and cardiovascular disease have been well documented. These
appear to be more than associations, but may reflect causal relationships through a number
of proposed pathways, including decreased physical activity, poor dietary habits, medication
non-adherence, and a direct impact on inflammatory mediators.

Aging is often associated with worsening of health disparities. The most vulnerable
subpopulation among the urban poor are the elderly, as they are naturally vulnerable due to
old age, compounded by lifetime exposure to poverty, and diminished defenses against
violence in their homes or neighborhoods, including routes to health service providers.

To date, health care interventions targeting specific individual risk factors in the elderly
have had only limited success in reducing health disparities in cardiovascular disease. The
investigators hypothesize that this is due to two reasons. First, changes in the healthcare
system are needed that feature multidisciplinary teams rather than individual practitioners.
Second, treatment of cardiovascular risk factors requires attention to the patient's
emotional state to guard against the possibility that providers and patients are working at
cross-purposes; that is, the provider wants the patient to take action to improve long-term
survival, while the patient is experiencing low self-esteem, hopelessness, helplessness, or
even a passive or active wish to die. Reducing the risk of heart disease in this complex
bio-psychosocial context requires more than prescribing the right medication or recommending
that individuals modify their diet and exercise. The investigators hypothesize that a
multi-level intervention targeting both the healthcare system and the individual's
psychosocial and behavioral risk factors may succeed where past interventions have failed.

The investigators therefore propose testing the hypothesis that an enhanced primary care
delivery system intervention which provides evidence-based, patient-centered mental health
services targeting depression and cardiovascular risk factors can reduce the risk of
development of cardiovascular disease in low-income elderly blacks and Hispanics.
Researchers at Rush University Medical Center have developed and tested several "virtual"
interdisciplinary team interventions, in which healthcare providers communicate as a team
via e-mail, telephone, fax, or video conferencing. The first of these, the Virtual
Integrated Practice project demonstrated that primary care practices could partner with
community-based teams to improve care of older adults with chronic illness. A subsequent
program called BRIGHTEN (Bridging Resources of a Geriatric Health Team via Electronic
Networking) enhanced the assessment and treatment of late life depression and anxiety in
primary care. The proposed "BRIGHTEN Heart study" will determine if a virtual
interdisciplinary clinical team (BRIGHTEN Heart) can reduce depression in older (age ≥ 65)
minority adults with comorbid depression and metabolic syndrome. The overall purpose of
this study is to reduce racial disparities in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in
black and Hispanic elderly by effectively controlling behavioral and psychosocial risk
factors.

A second, exploratory purpose of the study is to better understand the impact of current
major stressors and lifetime and current traumatic stressors, as these may be "hidden"
factors that impact emotional state, individual behavior, access to care, and intervention
adherence. It is our goal to them incorporate what the investigators learn about the impact
of major and traumatic stressors into later intervention as part of our overall Center
efforts.

Study Hypothesis:

Compared to an educational group, older minority patients with symptoms of depression and
comorbid metabolic syndrome receiving the BRIGHTEN Heart virtual team intervention will
demonstrate

1. Significant reductions in symptoms of depression [Primary trial outcome]

2. Significant reductions in metabolic syndrome

3. Improved adherence with medications prescribed for medical illnesses

Primary Aim

1. To determine whether BRIGHTEN Heart can reduce depression symptoms in older adults with
the metabolic syndrome

Secondary Aims

2. To determine whether the BRIGHTEN Heart intervention can result in reduced prevalence
of metabolic syndrome as compared to a control population

3. To test the mediating hypothesis that the BRIGHTEN Heart intervention results in
improvements in adherence with medications

Exploratory Aim

4. To explore the impact of trauma and major life stressors on the results of the
intervention

Inclusion Criteria:

- At least 60 years of age.

- Overweight or Obese as documented by BMI greater than 25.0.

- Presence of Depression symptoms, as determined by having a PHQ-9 score of 8 or more.

- Receiving primary care through a participating safety net clinic (public clinic or
FQHC)

Exclusion Criteria:

- Below the age of 60 years old at time of enrollment.

- Lack decisional capacity (due to dementia, active psychosis, or other cause).

- Are currently under active behavioral treatment of a psychologist or psychiatrist for
any reason.

- Lack regular access to a telephone in their home (including cell phone).

- Are enrolled in another intervention trial
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