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Appalachian STAR Trial


Collapse Overview 
Collapse abstract
Health disparities in rural America begin early in life, arising from social determinants of health that start in childhood. School health programs often provide the only access to preventive services for rural children. However, school screening is variably implemented, plagued by loss to follow-up, and limited specialists in rural areas compound barriers to care. We propose to prospectively implement a novel model of care in Appalachian schools of rural Kentucky to address social determinants at the school, health system, and policy levels that hinder identification and treatment of preventable health disparities for two NIH-designated disparity populations: underserved rural and socioeconomically disadvantaged children. Our goal is to establish a novel, generalizable model of school-based, telehealth-driven preventive care that can be disseminated in underserved populations across rural America. We will adapt and evaluate our evidence-based approach, ?STAR? (Specialty Telemedicine Access for Referrals), that we have found effective in a Tribal setting in rural Alaska. Appalachia has some of the poorest counties in the US, making this region ideal for adapting across rural America. The innovative ?Appalachian STAR trial? will be the first study to apply school-based telehealth for preventive services, with direct access to specialists. Hearing screening will be the prototype for STAR due to the high burden of preventable, infection-related hearing loss in underserved children and the profound lifelong implications of childhood hearing loss. Our interdisciplinary team has relationships with underserved communities in Kentucky and partnership with a Community Advisory Board and Stakeholder Advisory Board providing support from the highest levels of state government (See KY Governor Letter). We will begin by adapting the STAR model of care to meet the needs of rural communities and schools through a community- and stakeholder-driven approach. We will evaluate the STAR care model in 66 schools in rural Kentucky through a stepped wedge cluster-randomized hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation trial with kindergarten children in 14 counties (n=~3600/year). The STAR intervention includes county-level school screening policy change with enhanced mHealth school hearing screening, followed by virtual specialty care referral. The stepped-wedge design allows evaluation of the policy/screening and referral components as well as comparison of usual care vs. full intervention (years 2 vs.5), while meeting community input that the intervention be available to all. Primary outcomes are the percentage of 1) children screened and 2) referrals resulting in specialty care within two months of screening. We conservatively hypothesize the percentage screened will improve by 20% and follow-up will improve by 40%. During the trial, we will assess multi-level implementation factors and outcomes to inform scale- up into other rural areas. Our STAR model could be both scaled across rural America and applied to other preventable health disparities, combining policy change on school health with digital innovations to radically expand access to care for underserved rural and socioeconomically disadvantaged children nationwide.

Collapse sponsor award id
U01OD033247


Collapse Biography 

Collapse Time 
Collapse start date
2021-09-22

Collapse end date
2026-08-31