U18HS027954
Cooperative Agreement
Overview
Grant Description
Healthy Hearts for Michigan (HH4M): Providing Support to Improve the Heart Health and Help Reduce CVD Disparities by Engagement with Primary Care Practices - Project Abstract.
Heart attack and stroke are two of the leading causes of death in the United States, accounting for approximately 800,000 deaths and over $300 billion in healthcare and disability costs each year. To reduce this burden, in 2011, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services launched the Million Hearts Campaign to prevent one million heart attacks and strokes by promoting the "ABCS" of clinical prevention (aspirin therapy, blood pressure control, cholesterol management, and smoking cessation).
Michigan is among the top 10 states with the highest cardiovascular disease (CVD) burden in the US. The CDC estimates a CVD rate of 1,379 per 100,000 people in Michigan (MI). Approximately 35% of MI adults have hypertension (HTN), with 77% taking high blood pressure medication, and 20% reporting they were smoking. Rural populations experience a higher than average prevalence of HTN and are more likely to be physically inactive, use tobacco, and have diabetes when compared with urban counties. Almost 25% of MI's population live in rural communities where individuals often face extended drive times to their primary care provider and provider shortages. Each of Michigan's 57 nonmetropolitan counties has a shortage of primary care practices.
Work within the AHRQ-funded EvidenceNOW program suggests that some evidence-based quality improvement strategies to improve CVD care can be adapted and implemented in small primary care practices with limited resources. The Healthy Hearts for Michigan (HH4M) project will build on EvidenceNOW by establishing a statewide cooperative and network of practice facilitators in MI who will support small rural practices to implement clinical interventions to improve HTN and tobacco cessation and provide education on ABCS evidence. These efforts will be coupled with optimization of health IT and remote monitoring and management through telehealth to address barriers to access and healthcare shortages in rural MI.
We have convened a multi-disciplinary collaborative that includes Altarum Institute, Michigan Center for Rural Health, Upper Peninsula Healthcare Solutions, the American Medical Association, Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, Northwestern University, and physician advisors. Our collaborative builds on the prior work of Altarum and our MI-based partners, delivering quality improvement support to small primary practices, with the learnings from a successful EvidenceNOW program to spread evidence-based best practices and build a sustainable primary care extension service in Michigan.
Specific aims of HH4M are to:
(1) Convene and evaluate the development of a statewide cooperative to support the in-clinic implementation of the HH4M model for patients with HTN and patients who use tobacco; and
(2) Evaluate the ability of rural practices to implement the elements of the HH4M model by identifying facilitators and barriers to sustainable implementation and test whether the model improves (a) blood pressure control and (b) tobacco use screening and cessation in a stepped-wedge trial with a pilot and three waves.
Heart attack and stroke are two of the leading causes of death in the United States, accounting for approximately 800,000 deaths and over $300 billion in healthcare and disability costs each year. To reduce this burden, in 2011, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services launched the Million Hearts Campaign to prevent one million heart attacks and strokes by promoting the "ABCS" of clinical prevention (aspirin therapy, blood pressure control, cholesterol management, and smoking cessation).
Michigan is among the top 10 states with the highest cardiovascular disease (CVD) burden in the US. The CDC estimates a CVD rate of 1,379 per 100,000 people in Michigan (MI). Approximately 35% of MI adults have hypertension (HTN), with 77% taking high blood pressure medication, and 20% reporting they were smoking. Rural populations experience a higher than average prevalence of HTN and are more likely to be physically inactive, use tobacco, and have diabetes when compared with urban counties. Almost 25% of MI's population live in rural communities where individuals often face extended drive times to their primary care provider and provider shortages. Each of Michigan's 57 nonmetropolitan counties has a shortage of primary care practices.
Work within the AHRQ-funded EvidenceNOW program suggests that some evidence-based quality improvement strategies to improve CVD care can be adapted and implemented in small primary care practices with limited resources. The Healthy Hearts for Michigan (HH4M) project will build on EvidenceNOW by establishing a statewide cooperative and network of practice facilitators in MI who will support small rural practices to implement clinical interventions to improve HTN and tobacco cessation and provide education on ABCS evidence. These efforts will be coupled with optimization of health IT and remote monitoring and management through telehealth to address barriers to access and healthcare shortages in rural MI.
We have convened a multi-disciplinary collaborative that includes Altarum Institute, Michigan Center for Rural Health, Upper Peninsula Healthcare Solutions, the American Medical Association, Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, Northwestern University, and physician advisors. Our collaborative builds on the prior work of Altarum and our MI-based partners, delivering quality improvement support to small primary practices, with the learnings from a successful EvidenceNOW program to spread evidence-based best practices and build a sustainable primary care extension service in Michigan.
Specific aims of HH4M are to:
(1) Convene and evaluate the development of a statewide cooperative to support the in-clinic implementation of the HH4M model for patients with HTN and patients who use tobacco; and
(2) Evaluate the ability of rural practices to implement the elements of the HH4M model by identifying facilitators and barriers to sustainable implementation and test whether the model improves (a) blood pressure control and (b) tobacco use screening and cessation in a stepped-wedge trial with a pilot and three waves.
Awardee
Funding Goals
TO SUPPORT RESEARCH AND EVALUATIONS, DEMONSTRATION PROJECTS, RESEARCH NETWORKS, AND MULTIDISCIPLINARY CENTERS AND TO DISSEMINATE INFORMATION ON HEALTH CARE AND ON SYSTEMS FOR THE DELIVERY OF SUCH CARE INVOLVING: (1) THE QUALITY, EFFECTIVENESS, EFFICIENCY, APPROPRIATENESS AND VALUE OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES, (2) QUALITY MEASUREMENT AND IMPROVEMENT, (3) THE OUTCOMES, COST, COST-EFFECTIVENESS, AND USE OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES AND ACCESS TO SUCH SERVICES, (4) CLINICAL PRACTICE, INCLUDING PRIMARY CARE AND PRACTICE-ORIENTED RESEARCH, (5) HEALTH CARE TECHNOLOGIES, FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT, (6) HEALTH CARE COSTS, PRODUCTIVITY, ORGANIZATION, AND MARKET FORCES, (7) HEALTH PROMOTION AND DISEASE PREVENTION, INCLUDING CLINICAL PREVENTIVE SERVICES, (8) HEALTH STATISTICS, SURVEYS, DATABASE DEVELOPMENT, AND EPIDEMIOLOGY, (9) DIGITAL HEALTHCARE RESEARCH, AND (10) PATIENT SAFETY RESEARCH, INCLUDING HEALTHCARE-ASSOCIATED INFECTIONS. IN SUPPORT OF THIS RESEARCH, THE AGENCY HAS A SPECIAL INTEREST IN HEALTH CARE AND ITS DELIVERY IN THE INNER CITY, IN RURAL AREAS, AND FOR PRIORITY POPULATIONS (LOW-INCOME GROUPS, MINORITY GROUPS, WOMEN, CHILDREN, THE ELDERLY, AND INDIVIDUALS WITH SPECIAL HEALTH CARE NEEDS).
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Place of Performance
Michigan
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been extended from 12/31/23 to 12/31/24 and the total obligations have increased 235% from $1,301,684 to $4,364,034.
Altarum Institute was awarded
HH4M: Improving Heart Health & Reducing CVD Disparities
Cooperative Agreement U18HS027954
worth $4,364,034
from Center for Evidence and Practice Improvement in January 2020 with work to be completed primarily in Michigan United States.
The grant
has a duration of 4 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.226 Research on Healthcare Costs, Quality and Outcomes.
The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity Supporting Primary Care to Advance Cardiovascular Health in States with High Prevalence of Preventable CVD Events (U18).
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 6/5/25
Period of Performance
1/1/21
Start Date
12/31/24
End Date
Funding Split
$4.4M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$4.4M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for U18HS027954
Transaction History
Modifications to U18HS027954
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
U18HS027954
SAI Number
U18HS027954-184499942
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
75AHRQ AHRQ Office of Management Services/Division of Grants Management
Funding Office
75EK00 AHRQ CENTER FOR EVIDENCE AND PRACTICE IMPROVEMENT
Awardee UEI
W87EWFMEBBD1
Awardee CAGE
57949
Performance District
MI-90
Senators
Debbie Stabenow
Gary Peters
Gary Peters
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
Transfers from the Patient-Centered Outcome Research Trust Fund, Departmental Management, Health and Human Services (075-0145) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $3,120,891 | 100% |
Modified: 6/5/25