| Literature DB >> 27429284 |
Margaret B Harrison1, Elizabeth G VanDenKerkhof2,3, Wilma M Hopman4,5, Meg E Carley6.
Abstract
This study followed a cohort of community-dwelling individuals receiving wound-care in a large urban-rural region. During a randomized control trial (RCT) evaluating outcomes of receiving care in a nurse-clinic or at home, many approached were willing to participate if they could choose their location of care. This provided a unique opportunity to enroll them as a "choice" cohort, following them in the same manner as the trial participants but allowing them to select their setting of care. The objective was to investigate the role of preference and location of care on care outcomes, including satisfaction with care, healing, health-related quality of life (HRQL), pain, and resource use. This is a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort of 126 individuals enrolled in an RCT to receive care at home or in a nurse-clinic (Allocated group), and an additional 104 who received care at home or in a nurse-clinic based on their preference (Choice group). Mobile individuals with a leg ulcer of venous or mixed venous etiology, referred for community leg ulcer care, were eligible. Specially-trained nurses provided care to both groups using an evidence-informed protocol. Baseline data included socio-demographic, circumstance-of-living and a detailed wound assessment. Mean age of the cohort was 68 years. Satisfaction, healing, recurrence, pain, HRQL, and resource utilization did not differ between groups. If available, individuals should have an option of care venue given almost half of those approached indicated a clear preference for clinic or home. With outcomes being similar, health care planners and decision-makers, as well as individuals and their families, can feel confident that the setting of care will not impact the outcomes. However, larger studies in other contexts are needed to explore the interaction between choice and setting.Entities:
Keywords: community clinics; community wound-care; homecare; leg ulcers; patient preference
Year: 2014 PMID: 27429284 PMCID: PMC4934598 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare2030401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure 1Allocated and choice, clinic and home, leg ulcer cohort study recruitment.
Figure 2Participant flow over 12 month follow-up period.
Comparison of the baseline characteristics of the study population and those allocated or given a choice of care setting.
| Characteristics 1 | TOTAL | ALLOCATED Care Setting ( | CHOICE of Care Setting ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Setting of Care | ||||
| ○ Home | 121 (52.6) | 65 (51.6) | 56 (53.8) | 0.79 |
| ○ Clinic | 109 (47.4) | 61 (48.4) | 48 (46.2) | |
| Etiology of leg Ulcer | ||||
| ○ Venous | 154 (67.0) | 86 (68.3) | 68 (65.4) | 0.67 |
| ○ Mixed | 76 (33.0) | 40 (31.7) | 36 (34.6) | |
| Gender-Female | 118 (51.3) | 71 (56.3) | 47 (45.2) | 0.11 |
| Language-English | 193 (83.9) | 106 (84.1) | 87 (83.7) | 0.99 |
| Living Alone | 87 (37.8) | 54 (42.9) | 33 (31.7) | 0.10 |
| Independently Mobile | 167 (72.9) | 89 (71.2) | 78 (75.0) | 0.55 |
| Ulcer Duration | ||||
| ○ ≤3 Months | 129 (56.1) | 73 (57.9) | 56 (53.8) | 0.30 |
| ○ >3 to ≤12 Months | 68 (29.6) | 39 (31.0) | 29 (27.9) | |
| ○ > 12 Months | 33 (14.3) | 14 (11.1) | 19 (18.3) | |
| Ulcer Size | ||||
| ○ ≤2.5 cm² | 124 (53.9) | 69 (54.8) | 55 (52.9) | 0.66 |
| ○ 2.5 to ≤10 cm² | 61 (26.5) | 35 (27.8) | 26 (25.0) | |
| ○ >10 cm² | 45 (19.6) | 22 (17.5) | 23 (22.1) | |
| Previous Ulceration (yes) | 116 (50.4) | 62 (49.2) | 54 (51.9) | 0.69 |
| Ulcer Size (cm2) † | 2.4 [0.98/6.7] | 2.3 [1.1/5.8] | 2.4 [0.82/9.0] | 1.00 2 |
| Diathesis in years † | 7 [3/12] | 8 [3/16] | 5 [2.5/9.0] | 0.05 2 |
| Duration at initial assessment in weeks † | 11.4 [4.6/24] | 10.6 [4.7/22.7] | 12.1 [4.4/30.6] | 0.73 2 |
| ABPI † | 1.07 [0.99/1.16] | 1.06 [0.98/1.14] | 1.08 [1.00/1.20] | 0.06 2 |
| Age (years) * | 68.0 (14.2) | 68.5 (14.1) | 67.5 (14.5) | 0.62 |
| SF12 Scores * | ||||
| ○ Mental Component | 49.4 (11.1) | 49.7 (11.0) | 49.0 (11.3) | 0.64 |
| ○ Physical Component | 35.7 (10.1) | 35.1 (9.9) | 36.4 (10.4) | 0.36 |
| Clinical Care 3 | ||||
| ABPI completed | 223 (97.0) | 122 (96.8) | 101 (97.1) | 1.00 |
| Compression Therapy | ||||
| ○ All | 208 (91.2) | 118 (94.4) | 90 (87.4) | 0.10 |
| ○ Venous disease | 143 (94.1) | 82 (96.5) | 61 (91.0) | 0.18 |
| ○ Mixed disease | 65 (85.5) | 36 (90.0) | 29 (80.6) | 0.33 |
1 Values are frequency (percent) unless indicated otherwise; frequency values may not always total 100% due to missing data. * values are mean (s.d.); † values are median [percentiles]; ABPI = Ankle Brachial Pressure Index. 2 Mann-Whitney U. 3 100% of clients received a comprehensive clinical assessment.
Comparison at 3 months of the individual’s perception of personal issues related to leg ulcer and satisfaction with care for those allocated or given a choice of care setting.
| Characteristic 1 | ALLOCATED Group ( | CHOICE Group | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | n (%) | ||
| ISSUES ( | |||
| Some problems walking about | 54 (52.9) | 39 (48.8) | 0.65 |
| Some problems with washing, dressing self | 16 (15.7) | 14 (17.5) | 0.84 |
| Some problems performing my usual activities | 50 (49.0) | 44 (55.7) | 0.48 |
| Not anxious or depressed | 74 (72.5) | 56 (70.0) | 0.27 |
| EuroQol EQ-5D Index † | 0.77 [0.70/0.84] | 0.77 [0.71/0.84] | 0.77 2 |
| CARE AND SERVICE SURVEY (
| |||
| Wait Time | |||
| ▪ Less than 30 min | 86 (88.7) | 72 (91.1) | 0.43 |
| ▪ Waiting 30 min–1 h | 9 (9.3) | 7 (8.9) | |
| ▪ Waiting 1–2 h | 2 (2.1) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Knows the name of the nurse who takes care of leg ulcer most of the time | 72 (74.2) | 69 (86.2) | 0.06 |
| Very/quite satisfied with information nurse provided for how to care for leg ulcer | 94 (96.9) | 78 (97.5) | 0.65 |
| Very/quite satisfied with information nurse provided for leg ulcer prevention | 83 (85.6) | 69 (87.3) | 0.74 |
| Very/quite Satisfied with nurses’ skill | 91 (94.8) | 78 (97.5) | 0.41 |
| Comfortable with bandages and dressings used for treatment | 55 (62.5) | 53 (69.7) | 0.41 |
| Very/quite Satisfied with treatment last 12 weeks | 88 (93.6) | 74 (96.1) | 0.67 |
| Recommend/highly recommend care you receive to others | 86 (92.5) | 75 (94.9) | 0.55 |
| Overall rating of the nursing care (1 = Poor to 10 = Excellent) † | 10 [9/10] | 10 [10/10] | 0.26 2 |
1 Values are frequency (percent) unless indicated otherwise; frequency values may not always total 100% due to missing data. * values are mean (s.d.); † values are median [percentiles]. 2 Mann-Whitney U.
Healing, pain, and quality of life outcomes and resource utilization for those allocated or given a choice of care setting.
| Outcome 1 | ALLOCATED Care Setting | CHOICE of Care Setting | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | n (%) | ||
| Healing 2 | |||
| ○ 3-month (≤91 days) | 69 (57.5) | 58 (56.9) | 1.00 |
| ○ Recurrence rate in one year 3 | 29 (25.2) | 18 (19.4) | 0.40 |
| Pain at 3 Months | |||
| ○ No pain | 58 (57.4) | 49 (59.8) | 0.94 |
| ○ Mild/Discomfort | 32 (31.7) | 24 (29.3) | |
| ○ Distressing/horrible/excruciating | 11 (10.9) | 9 (11.0) | |
| SF12 Scores at 3 Months * | |||
| ○ Mental Component | 52.8 (10.4) | 52.5 (11.1) | 0.85 |
| ○ Physical Component | 39.0 (11.3) | 40.1 (12.4) | 0.55 |
| General Health Assessment | |||
| ○ Excellent or Very Good | 29 (29.3) | 26 (32.5) | 0.32 |
| ○ Good | 39 (39.4) | 37 (46.2) | |
| ○ Fair or Poor | 31 (31.3) | 17 (21.2) | |
| Resource Utilization for an Episode of Leg Ulcer Care 4 | |||
| ○ Number of Nursing Visits † | 23 [12/48] | 25 [14/51] | 0.40 |
| ○ Weeks on Service † | 13 [7/24] | 14 [8/27] | 0.38 |
| ○ Visits per Week † | 2 [1.6/2.3] | 2 [1.7/2.5] | 0.34 |
| ○ Nursing Costs † | $1135 [612/2347] | $1283 [698/2556] | 0.33 |
| ○ Cost of Wound Supplies † | $531 [251/1115] | $545 [191/1163] | 0.97 |
1 Values are frequency (percent) unless indicated otherwise; frequency values may not always total 100% due to missing data. * values are mean (s.d.); † values are median [percentiles]. 2 Six clients in the Allocated group and two clients in the Choice group were not included in the analysis because of loss to follow-up after baseline. 3 Clients who were lost to follow-up after baseline or never healed were not included in the analysis (Allocated group n = 115, Choice group n = 93). 4 Time on service until leg ulcer was healed. p-values for resource utilization are based on Mann-Whitney U.
Figure 3Kaplan-Meier curves showing proportion of ulcers healed by group.