key: cord-0789956-bkkctc40 authors: Kruse, Gina; Pelton-Cairns, Leslie; Taveras, Elsie; Dargon-Hart, Susan; Gundersen, Daniel A.; Lee, Rebekka M.; Bierer, Barbara E.; Lawlor, Erica; LaRocque, Regina; Marcus, Julia L.; Davies, Madeline E.; Emmons, Karen title: Implementing expanded COVID-19 testing in Massachusetts community health centers through community partnerships: Protocol for an interrupted time series and stepped wedge study design date: 2022-05-06 journal: Contemp Clin Trials DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2022.106783 sha: 6c4a3aa16583a102d6a22ad86f5a7ab261055cf4 doc_id: 789956 cord_uid: bkkctc40 Background Community Health Centers (CHCs) are a critical source of care for low-income and non-privately insured populations. During the pandemic, CHCs have leveraged their infrastructure and role as a trusted source of care to engage the communities they serve in COVID-19 testing. Methods To directly address the impact that COVID-19 has had on historically marginalized populations in Massachusetts, we designed a study of community-engaged COVID-19 testing expansion: (1) leveraging existing partnerships to accelerate COVID-19 testing and rapidly disseminate effective implementation strategies; (2) incorporating efforts to address key barriers to testing participation in communities at increased risk for COVID-19; (3) further developing partnerships between communities and CHCs to address testing access and disparities; (4) grounding the study in the development of a shared ethical framework for advancing equity in situations of scarcity; and (5) developing mechanisms for communication and science translation to support community outreach. We use a controlled interrupted time series design, comparing number of COVID-19 tests overall and among people identified as members of high-risk groups served by intervention CHCs compared with six matched control CHCs in Massachusetts, followed by a stepped wedge design to pilot test strategies for tailored outreach by CHCs. Conclusions Here, we describe a community-partnered strategy to accelerate COVID-19 testing in historically marginalized populations that provides ongoing resources to CHCs for addressing testing needs in their communities. The study aligns with principles of community-engaged research including shared leadership, adequate resources for community partners, and the flexibility to respond to changing needs over time. In this manuscript, we outline our protocol for an NIH-funded Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics in Underserved Populations (RADx-UP) project [8] . We recognize that underserved is not a preferred term in inclusive communication here but use it in places to reference this funding mechanism. This project aims to implement expanded COVID-19 testing among CHCs in Massachusetts using a community-engaged approach (RADx-MA). Our aim is to accelerate COVID-19 testing among CHC patients and community members who are medically underserved or historically marginalized, including those living in congregate housing, people experiencing homelessness, and low-wage essential workers. We support the CHC-community partnerships through: 1) a Testing Capacity and Innovation Team, which provides infectious disease expertise and technical guidance on COVID-19 testing; 2) a Community Communications Team that uses educational and communication design strategies to develop culturally and linguistically appropriate materials to support pandemic response outreach activities; and 3) a community-engaged, equity-focused approach to implementation supported by the Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers (MA League). The MA League is the Primary Care Association for health centers in Massachusetts. They support and assist with communication, workforce development, technical assistance and advocacy for health centers and the communities they serve. This collaborative design brings together MA League's expertise in implementation and quality improvement programs, community-engaged research principles, and the tools of implementation science applied through an equity lens to support CHCs. Our main hypothesis is that strengthening CHC-community partnerships through equity-focused implementation efforts, involvement of local advisory groups, and community outreach communications will increase volume of COVID-19 testing in underserved populations. RADx-MA has three specific aims: 1. Create and implement a community-partnered infrastructure that will accelerate testing in six CHCs that serve nine communities. 2. Conduct a series of community-engaged pilot studies to address key barriers to testing through communications and outreach. This two-year project started in September 2020. Here we present our research protocol, including our early experiences, challenges, and successes with the implementation of intervention activities. This study aims to accelerate COVID-19 testing in communities that are highly affected by the pandemic through six CHC-community partnerships in Massachusetts. This includes five federally-qualified health centers and one group of CHCs licensed by an academic medical center that itself serves four communities [9] . The RADx-MA CHCs care for 141,000 patients, and their surrounding communities have over 1.3 million residents. The study is supported by our Implementation Science Center for Cancer Control Equity (ISCCCE, National Cancer Institute #5P50CA244433), a collaboration with the MA League. ISCCCE supports an implementation laboratory (iLab) of partnerships with Massachusetts CHCs to support community-engaged implementation science research. ISCCCE also partners with Azara Healthcare, creator of a population management platform, the Data Reporting and Visualization System (DRVS), that is used by CHCs across Massachusetts and nationally. DRVS enables rapid data aggregation and reporting, including the capture of COVID-related data across the different electronic health records in use by Massachusetts CHCs. The study was approved by the Mass General Brigham Institutional Review Board (Protocol #2020P003743) and registered in ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04802187). Our work is guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation in Health (CFIR), adapted to incorporate an equity lens [10] . Equity focused constructs are incorporated at each CFIR domain: intervention characteristics, processes, individual characteristics, and inner and outer setting measures. The CFIR framework is paired with implementation outcomes, service outcomes, and client outcomes specified using Proctor's outcomes model [11] . The framework developed from CFIR and the Proctor model informs the CHCand area-level data that we collect from the six RADx-MA CHCs (Figure 1 ). RADx-MA CHCs serve communities at increased risk for COVID-19 that were highly impacted by the initial surge in Massachusetts (late summer 2020). In June 2020, prior to the start of this project, the six CHCs were conducting between 150 and 500 tests per week with positivity rates of 17% to 36% (Table 1 ). The CHCs identified populations at increased risk of COVID-19 who faced barriers to testing in summer 2020, including essential workers, people with limited English proficiency, immigrant populations, people who are incarcerated or formerly incarcerated, people facing housing instability or homelessness, seniors in congregate housing, people with substance use disorders, and those in multigenerational homes. The six RADx-MA CHCs were matched with six control CHCs for the main outcome analysis. Matched clinics were selected purposively to be similar with respect to volume of patients 18 years and older, percent of patient population in racial or ethnic minoritized groups, and COVID-19 testing volume. Figure 2 ) situates the CHCs and their community partners, which include community-based organizations and local government, as the key focal points. The Implementation Laboratory (iLab) is our implementation research unit, supporting organizational capacity-building, knowledge transfer, and technical assistance in addition to financial resources. The iLab team, including representation from the MA League and the investigator team, serve as practice facilitators who work to build capacity and support implementation of testing services and community partnerships through regular meetings with each CHC team. The iLab was designed with a central role for the MA League to leverage both their experience with implementation in CHCs as well as their role in pandemic-related advocacy and coordination as the CHC primary care association for the state. To facilitate knowledge transfer and technical assistance, the iLab hosts an online learning community through the MA League for RADx-MA partner CHCs to compare approaches, share successes, and distribute resources. Technical assistance is also provided for DRVS and study data collection. Each of the six RADx-MA CHCs receives $300,000 in year one and $75,000 in year two to support implementation and evaluation of testing expansion and development of community-partnerships with more funding in year one due to funding mechanism requirements. The six matched control CHCs participate in a data sharing agreement and receive $3,000 to facilitate data sharing. To inform our initial approach, we conducted a rapid organizational needs assessment, combining secondary data on community-level COVID-19 rates with CHC-level data gathered by videoconference with leaders at J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f Journal Pre-proof each of our six partner CHCs prior to grant submission. This initial CHC data included a description of current testing volume and positivity rates, populations at increased risk for COVID-19, community partners, and testing infrastructure (Table 1 ). This step was essential to understand the scope of work and planning that was already happening in the CHCs around COVID-19 testing prior to the RADx-MA project. An in-depth needs assessment was conducted concurrently with the initial testing expansion efforts at study start. The in-depth needs assessment engaged CHC staff, community-based organizations, and residents to identify testing barriers in the external community setting (economic stability, social environment, employer and municipal policies, reopening phase, local resources), inner organizational setting (competing demands, culture, linguistic services, staffing), individual barriers (knowledge/beliefs about testing, perceived risks, stigma), testing workflow characteristics (complexity, adaptability, accessibility, cost, source), and processes (integrating testing into existing services and treatment for those infected, adapting testing processes to community contexts, and engaging stakeholders). One-on-one interviews with stakeholders were conducted in interviewee's preferred language, transcribed and translated. Transcripts were analyzed using a rapid framework analysis [12] , guided by CFIR [10] , to identify common actionable themes around barriers to testing [13] . The community-partnered infrastructure design decisions were informed by the needs assessments, known predictors of COVID-19 testing access [14, 15] , and the populations at increased risk for COVID-19 who were known by the CHCs to have limited access to testing. For the selection of community partners, the CHCs were asked to consider which community-based organizations could best help them to address local barriers to testing. The organizations the CHCs initially selected to partner with for the study included faith-based organizations, food banks, shelters, YMCA/YWCA, transit and housing authorities, local health departments, immigration and refugee services, and groups supporting essential workers. J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f Two advisory group structures were developed to guide local and center-wide efforts: local community advisory groups (LCAGs) and a center-wide community advisory board (CWCAB). Each CHC developed an LCAG with representatives from their specific priority populations and the CHC. The LCAGs include a minimum of two patient representatives. Other members vary by CHC and include local board of health representatives and community organizations serving populations at increased risk for COVID-19 to support testing outreach. The governance structure for the LCAGs is designed to be flexible to fit existing structures and community needs. The LCAGs met monthly throughout the first year and are encouraged to adjust the meeting frequency in year two to match ongoing community needs. Two representatives from each LCAG participate in a Center-Wide Community Advisory Board (CWCAB) that meets quarterly. The CWCAB also includes members with statewide perspectives and resources (e.g., public health officials, representatives of community health workers, immigrant, and refugee advocacy groups). A Testing Capacity and Innovation Team (TCIT) provides infectious disease expertise, expert technical guidance, and ongoing support to the CHCs for expansion of community-based testing and identification of strategies to overcome testing barriers. The CHC's testing goals include COVID-19 testing in symptomatic and exposed individuals and 'surveillance-like' outreach testing in high-risk groups. TCIT provides ongoing expertise to identify emerging FDA-authorized/approved testing platforms to support testing expansion and ready access to infectious disease expertise. In partnership with CHCs, throughout the first year of the project, the Community Communications Team (2) the context in which community residents work and live; and (3) needs and barriers to testing as identified by community partners. From that intersection, the team extrapolates appropriate messaging to develop a series of relatable communication materials. The team identifies key learning outcomes and critical knowledge to incentivize testing, prevention, and mitigation. Using the Understanding by Design Framework [17] , materials are designed by working backwards from the desired outcomes, beginning with a deeper understanding of the audience and specifying measurable goals. The CCT integrates feedback from community partners and end-users to maintain the currency of materials. The team used open-source materials from public health entities and others to speed material development. Materials are created in multiple formats to meet local needs (e.g., fliers, social media). In addition to creating materials in multiple languages, the CCT seeks input from the CHCs, LCAGs, and a team of translators on cultural appropriateness. Diverse levels of education are accommodated by use of visual content (e.g., digital flyers). Each site then worked with the iLab and the CCT in consultation with the TCIT to create communications materials along with a strategy involving community partners in the dissemination of materials. RADx-MA C. 3 Control I.4 RADx-MA C.4 Control I.5 RADx-MA C.5 Control I. 6 RADx-MA C. 6 Control Overall RADx-MA testing acceleration strategy roll out begins in month 4. Stepped wedge site-specific tailored outreach begins mid-month 7 with a new site beginning outreach activities every 2 weeks. For the overall primary outcome of number of COVID-19 tests, we used a controlled interrupted time series design, comparing the aggregated number of tests across the RADx-MA intervention CHCs with six matched control CHCs in Massachusetts that also use the DRVS system. We conducted a simulation study (1000 simulated data sets) to estimate power to detect a 3.5% acceleration in weekly testing (or roughly 0. 5% acceleration of daily testing) at α = 0.05 threshold. Population parameters were determined based on a preliminary analysis of a testing time series from 4 CHCs with available testing data between May 1 and July 11, 2000 (when testing was more widely available in Massachusetts). We observed an average of 212 tests per day, a flat time-trend, and no significant autocorrelation after adjusting for seasonality related to the day of the week. Further, we assumed 518 days in the time series (for a total of 1,036 across both intervention and control CHCs) with an equal number of days pre-to post-implementation, no difference between intervention and control CHCs during the pre-implementation time series and a 5% difference in the post-implementation intercept. Based on these assumptions we estimated greater than 90% power to detect 3.5% weekly acceleration in testing (~0.5% daily). The DRVS platform used by CHCs and an enterprise data registry used by the academic medical center affiliated CHCs provide detailed data on test participants, including demographics, the type of COVID-19 test ordered, test result, documented COVID-19 symptoms, vitals, comorbid conditions, and social needs. For people who are tested by CHCs but are not their patients, at a minimum CHCs collect demographics, tests ordered, and results. As required by the RADx-UP funding mechanism, CHCs were asked to collect a core set of common data elements that gathered specific information related to testing from a random sample of individual test participants. All other data are collected and examined at the CHC level. We implemented a rigorous data extraction, de-identification, and management protocol to ensure data quality and safety. For our planned analysis of the primary outcome, we will compare improvement in the COVID-19 testing rate overall and within population groups at increased risk for COVID-19, and characterize major contextual events (e.g., transition to subsequent phases of re-opening or closure; initiation of the Massachusetts contact tracing program; city-level case counts) as well as the implementation of the planned testing acceleration strategies. We will describe the time series of testing in the intervention and control CHCs individually and in aggregate. Estimation will be done via generalized linear time series model for number of tests per day. Tests per day will be modeled as a function of time (in day units), a dummy variable for pre-vs. post-intervention period, a dummy variable for whether the CHC is an intervention or control clinic, and two-and three-way interaction terms for time, pre-vs. post-intervention dummy, and intervention versus control dummy. The coefficient for the three-way interaction is interpreted as the acceleration in the testing trend for intervention relative to control CHCs. The model will control for day of week to account for day-of-week seasonality. In our stepped-wedge cluster randomized pilot implementation study we will estimate the impact of strategies for tailored outreach by fitting a generalized linear mixed effects model, where testing is modeled as a function of time (to control for secular trend), an indicator for whether the data are from an intervention or baseline step, a random intercept for CHC to control for clustering of patients within CHCs, and a set of clinic-and patientlevel covariates, including inner and outer setting data ( Figure 1) for CHCs, and patient clinical and demographic data. Estimates will be presented with 95% confidence intervals with practical recommendations at different effect sizes within the range of the estimated confidence interval discussed. J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f By design, we have several mechanisms for disseminating information about successes with reducing barriers to testing. First, within the project, the iLab team is well-positioned to share experiences related to common issues between the six CHCs through their online learning community for RADx-MA partner CHCs. The MA League also leads regular meetings with all Massachusetts CHCs on COVID-19 services. These meetings provide an opportunity for real-time dissemination and sharing of strategies to respond to rapidly changing state regulations and resources. Communications materials are also available on the ISCCCE website (https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/isccce/rapid-acceleration-of-diagnostics-underserved-populations-radx-up/). We have encountered a few key challenges and learnings through our first year of this two-year project. One challenge has been the speed at which communication resources are needed for pandemic response. For some communication materials, it worked well for the Communications Team and CHC teams to coordinate, iterate, and translate materials. At other times, the materials were needed more quickly than this iterative process could support, and in these cases the CHCs often produced materials internally, using their usual methods rather than those used by the Communications Team. Second, it has been challenging to keep attention and resources focused on COVID-19 testing as the pandemic circumstances continue to shift, particularly during phases where a substantial proportion of CHC resources were being directed toward vaccine outreach and delivery. For example, CHCs described LCAGs where members emphasized vaccine access over testing. CHCs were coached to be flexible to allow LCAGs to discuss other key pandemic response issues, but to maintain focus on testing needs in the community to align with the aims of the grant. Third, extensive CHC staffing constraints have been limiting throughout the project. This particularly impacted the proposed activities of the HPRU in that planned additional meetings with the CHCs increased burden and expectations on staff who were already burdened with care responsibilities. The data sharing and transfer processes also meant that data were available for analysis by the HPRU only late after initiation of testing paradigms. As a result, HPRU relied on interactions with LCAGs to learn about ethical issues and health equity in testing expansion. All data collection activities have had to be streamlined and flexible enough to accommodate the unique workflows at each CHC. Collection of patient-level data has been particularly challenging from the perspective of CHC burden. To illustrate this, CHCs were supported to gather additional J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f data to assess reach among their priority populations using whatever methods produced the least burden on their staff, whether in-person at time of testing or by telephone after the testing encounter. However, when testing volumes were high the workflows were challenged to accommodate additional data collection. We have designed a community-partnered strategy to accelerate COVID-19 testing among historically marginalized populations. We have set up mechanisms that provide active and on-going resources to the CHCs for addressing testing challenges with populations at increased risk for COVID-19, all designed following an in-depth needs assessment with CHC clinical teams, community partner organizations, and community residents. A key part of our study design is provision of adequate resources to the CHCs to facilitate their outreach activities, as well as flexibility in responding to the various demands of the pandemic over time. This work will produce needed information on the value of community-centered interventions in the equitable expansion of COVID-19 testing. This manuscript was made possible with help from the Implementation Science Center for Cancer Control Equity, a National Cancer Institute funded program (P50 CA244433), and corresponding supplement Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics-MA (P50CA244433-02S1). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Cancer Institute. Sadath Sayeed, Eddie Taborda, and Oby Ukadike. The authors acknowledge and Conceptualization, methodology, investigation, writing-original draft preparation Leslie Pelton-Cairns: Conceptualization, investigation, project administration, writing-review and editing Conceptualization, funding acquisition, resources, supervision; Susan Dargon-Hart: Conceptualization, funding acquisition, resources, supervision Conceptualization, formal analysis, data curation, methodology, writing-review and editing Conceptualization, methodology, investigation, writing-review and editing Bierer: Conceptualization, methodology, supervision, writing-review and editing; Erica Lawlor: Conceptualization, resources, supervision, writing-review and editing Regina LaRocque: Conceptualization, resources, writing-review and editing Conceptualization, methodology, writing-review and editing Project administration, writing-review and editing Karen Emmons: Conceptualization, methodology, supervision, funding acquisition, writing-original draft preparation Racial and ethnic disparities in covid-19-related infections, hospitalizations, and deaths : A systematic review Racial and ethnic disparities in population-level covid-19 mortality Disparities in covid-19 outcomes by race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status: A systematic-review and meta-analysis Health care reform and primary care--the growing importance of the community health center National Association of Community Health Centers National Association of Community Health Centers Infographics: National findings on health centers' response to covid-19 Fostering implementation of health services research findings into practice: A consolidated framework for advancing implementation science Outcomes for implementation research: Conceptual distinctions, measurement challenges, and research agenda Flexible coding of in-depth interviews: A twenty-first-century approach Addressing covid-19 testing inequities among underserved populations in massachusetts: A rapid qualitative exploration of health center staff, partner, and resident perceptions Sars-cov-2 testing in north carolina: Racial, ethnic, and geographic disparities Black and latinx community perspectives on covid-19 mitigation behaviors, testing, and vaccines Expanded 2nd Edition. Association for Supervision & Curriculum Development Guidance for managing ethical issues in infectious disease outbreaks Global health governance: Commission on social determinants of health and the imperative for change Epidemiology and social justice in light of social determinants of health research Life course health development: An integrated framework for developing health, policy, and research Designing and conducting mixed methods research This project is a supplement to the Cancer Moonshot funded Implementation Science Center for Cancer Control Equity (National Cancer Institute # 5P50CA244433) and any data generated for this project will be shared in accordance with Cancer Moonshot funding policies. GK has a family financial interest in a digital health company, Dimagi, Inc. All other authors have no disclosures.