| Literature DB >> 31133585 |
Elizabeth L Sampson1, Alexandra Feast1, Alan Blighe2, Katherine Froggatt3, Rachael Hunter4, Louise Marston4, Brendan McCormack5, Shirley Nurock1, Monica Panca4, Catherine Powell2, Greta Rait4, Louise Robinson6, Barbara Woodward-Carlton2, John Young7, Murna Downs2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Acute hospital admission is distressing for care home residents. Ambulatory care sensitive conditions, such as respiratory and urinary tract infections, are conditions that can cause unplanned hospital admission but may have been avoidable with timely detection and intervention in the community. The Better Health in Residents in Care Homes (BHiRCH) programme has feasibility tested and will pilot a multicomponent intervention to reduce these avoidable hospital admissions. The BHiRCH intervention comprises an early warning tool for noting changes in resident health, a care pathway (clinical guidance and decision support system) and a structured method for communicating with primary care, adapted for use in the care home. We use practice development champions to support implementation and embed changes in care. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Cluster randomised pilot trial to test study procedures and indicate whether a further definitive trial is warranted. Fourteen care homes with nursing (nursing homes) will be randomly allocated to intervention (delivered at nursing home level) or control groups. Two nurses from each home become Practice Development Champions trained to implement the intervention, supported by a practice development support group. Data will be collected for 3 months preintervention, monthly during the 12-month intervention and 1 month after. Individual-level data includes resident, care partner and staff demographics, resident functional status, service use and quality of life (for health economic analysis) and the extent to which staff perceive the organisation supports person centred care. System-level data includes primary and secondary health services contacts (ie, general practitioner and hospital admissions). Process evaluation assesses intervention acceptability, feasibility, fidelity, ease of implementation in practice and study procedures (ie, consent and recruitment rates). ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Approved by Research Ethics Committee and the UK Health Research Authority. Findings will be disseminated via academic and policy conferences, peer-reviewed publications and social media (eg, Twitter). TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN74109734; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: dementia; geriatric medicine; heart failure; primary care; respiratory infections; urinary tract infections
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31133585 PMCID: PMC6538003 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Pilot trial flow chart.
Summary of data collected, outcome measures and time schedule
| Data collected and tool used | Pre-intervention | Monthly | At 6 months only | Post-intervention | |
| Resident | |||||
| Sociodemographics | Age, gender, ethnicity, marital status, highest level of education. | R | – | – | – |
| Service use in the prior month | Client Service Receipt Inventory (ref). Calculates service and total care costs. | R | R | R | R |
| Functional status | The Barthel Index. | R | – | R | R |
| Resident quality of life-self rated | EQ-5D-5L (ref) self-rated health index and Visual Analogue Scale of current health state. | P | – | P | P |
| Resident quality of life-proxy rated | EQ-5d-Proxy (ref) care partner or staff member view of the resident’s quality of life. | CP/S | – | CP/S | CP/S |
| Care partner | |||||
| Sociodemographics | Age, gender, ethnicity, marital status, years of schooling, highest level of education. | CP | – | CP | CP |
| Quality of life | EQ-5D-5L EuroQol (1990). | CP | – | CP | CP |
| Preferred role | How much and how they like to be involved in the residents care. | CP | – | – | – |
| Staff | |||||
| Staff sociodemographics | Age, gender, ethnicity, number of years of education. | R | – | – | – |
| Staff work characteristics | Highest qualification, role in care home, length of service, shift pattern, first language. | R | – | – | – |
| Organisational support for person-centred care | The Person-Centred Care Assessment Tool (ref). | S | – | S | S |
| Communication with primary care | Nurse-General Practitioner Communication Needs Assessment Questionnaire. | S | – | S | S |
| Perceived knowledge and skills for early detection in changes in health | Developed from feasibility study. Assesses key knowledge and skills needed to implement the intervention. Rated on 5-point Likert scale; 1 (disagree completely) to 5 (agree completely). | S | – | S | S |
| System-level data | |||||
| Number of hospital admissions | Respiratory infections, urinary tract infections, dehydration, congestive heart failure? | S | S | S | S |
| ‘Avoidability’ of admissions | Structured Implicit Record Review.Saliba | S | S | S | S |
| Use of primary assessment tool | Respiratory infections, urinary tract infections, dehydration, congestive heart failure? | S | S | S | S |
| Use of secondary assessment tool | Respiratory infections, urinary tract infections, dehydration, congestive heart failure? | S | S | S | S |
| Out of hours GP contacts | GP visits or telephone contact. | S | S | S | S |
| Ambulances and hospital use | Number and length of hospital admissions (days), accident and emergency attendances and readmissions. | S | S | S | S |
| Deaths in the last calendar month | S | S | S | S | |
| Staff turnover | S | S | S | S | |
| Care home occupancy level | Number of available beds to new residents. | S | S | S | S |
CP, care partner; P, participant; R researcher; S, care home staff.