| Literature DB >> 31843821 |
Andrew P Costa1,2,3, Connie Schumacher4,5, Aaron Jones4, Darly Dash4, Graham Campbell4, Mats Junek4,2, Gina Agarwal4,6, Chaim M Bell7, Veronique Boscart8, Susan E Bronskill9, David Feeny10, Paul C Hébert11, George A Heckman12, John P Hirdes12, Linda Lee6, Robert S McKelvie13, Lori Mitchell14, Samir K Sinha15, Joy Davis16, Tammy Priddle17, Joanne Rose18, Roslyn Gillan19, Deborah Mills19, Dilys Haughton5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Home care clients are increasingly medically complex, have limited access to effective chronic disease management and have very high emergency department (ED) visitation rates. There is a need for more appropriate and targeted supportive chronic disease management for home care clients. We aim to evaluate the effectiveness and preliminary cost effectiveness of a targeted, person-centred cardiorespiratory management model. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The Detection of Indicators and Vulnerabilities of Emergency Room Trips (DIVERT) - Collaboration Action Research and Evaluation (CARE) trial is a pragmatic, cluster-randomised, multicentre superiority trial of a flexible multicomponent cardiorespiratory management model based on the best practice guidelines. The trial will be conducted in partnership with three regional, public-sector, home care providers across Canada. The primary outcome of the trial is the difference in time to first unplanned ED visit (hazard rate) within 6 months. Additional secondary outcomes are to identify changes in patient activation, changes in cardiorespiratory symptom frequencies and cost effectiveness over 6 months. We will also investigate the difference in the number of unplanned ED visits, number of inpatient hospitalisations and changes in health-related quality of life. Multilevel proportional hazard and generalised linear models will be used to test the primary and secondary hypotheses. Sample size simulations indicate that enrolling 1100 home care clients across 36 clusters (home care caseloads) will yield a power of 81% given an HR of 0.75. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval was obtained from the Hamilton Integrated Research Ethics Board as well as each participating site's ethics board. Results will be submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals and for presentation at relevant conferences. Home care service partners will also be informed of the study's results. The results will be used to inform future support strategies for older adults receiving home care services. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03012256. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: DIVERT scale; cardio-respiratory; chronic disease management; cluster-randomised; disease management; home care
Year: 2019 PMID: 31843821 PMCID: PMC6924743 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030301
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Caseload randomisation schematic. HNHB LHIN, Hamilton-Niagara-Haldimand-Brant Local Health Integration Network.
WHO trial registration dataset for Detection of Indicators and Vulnerabilities of Emergency Room Trips Collaboration Action Research and Evaluation (DIVERT-CARE) Trial (as of 11 March 2019; protocol version 2.1, 17 April 2017)
| Data category | Information |
| Primary registry and trial identifying number | ClinicalTrials.gov |
| Date of registration in primary registry | 6 January 2017 |
| Secondary identifying numbers | |
| Source(s) of monetary or material support | Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Hamilton Niagara Haldimand Brant Community Local Health Integration Network (Hamilton, Ontario); Western Health (Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador); Island Health (Victoria, British Columbia); Canadian Frailty Network |
| Primary sponsor | McMaster University |
| Secondary sponsor(s) | None |
| Contact for public queries | Graham Campbell, MA (campbg4@mcmaster.ca) |
| Contact for scientific queries | Andrew Costa, PhD (acosta@mcmaster.ca) |
| Public title | The DIVERT-CARE (Collaboration Action Research and Evaluation) Trial |
| Scientific title | The DIVERT-CARE (Collaboration Action Research and Evaluation) Trial: a multiprovincial pragmatic cluster randomised trial of cardiorespiratory management in home care |
| Countries of recruitment | Canada |
| Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied | Heart failure; COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder) |
| Intervention(s) |
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| Key inclusion and exclusion criteria |
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| Long-stay home care clients living in a non-institutional setting (ie, admitted to home care and receive comprehensive clinical assessment (RAI-HC)) | |
| Clients with DIVERT score of 9, 10, 14 or 15 (ie, at least one cardiorespiratory symptom (chest pain, dyspnoea, dizziness, irregular pulse) and at least one cardiac condition (congestive heart failure or coronary artery disease)) | |
| Study type | Interventional |
| Allocation: cluster randomised intervention model. Parallel assignment, open label | |
| Primary purpose: prevention | |
| Pragmatic | |
| Date of first enrolment | 6 February 2018 |
| Target sample size | 1080 |
| Recruitment status | Recruiting |
| Primary outcome(s) | The difference in days to first unplanned emergency department visit (hazard rate; time frame: up to 6 months from baseline); the difference in total care costs controlling for length of stay (time frame: up to 6 months from baseline); changes in patient activation (patient activation questionnaire; time frame: baseline, 2 months, 4 months, 6 months); the difference in the number of symptoms (time frame: baseline, 2 months, 4 months, 6 months) |
| Key secondary outcomes | The difference in the number of unplanned emergency department visits (time frame: up to 6 months from baseline); description of health-related quality of life (quality-of-life questionnaire; time frame: 4 months, 6 months) |
RAI-HC, Resident Assessment Instrument for Home Care.
Figure 2Detection of Indicators and Vulnerabilities of Emergency Room Trips scale target groups. ED, emergency department; UTI, Urinary Tract Infection
Description of intervention components
| DIVERT-CARE intervention components | Description |
| Case finding using the DIVERT Scale | Use of the DIVERT Scale (embedded in interRAI assessment) to identify home care clients most likely to benefit. |
| Self-management education and supports | In-home assessment of self-management goals and needs, with practical education and skills training to recognise and manage symptoms. |
| Access to an immediate nurse-staffed helpline | Direct phone line staffed by nurses involved in the DIVERT-CARE intervention to aid with self-management and problem resolution. |
| Promotion of vaccines | Seasonal influenza vaccine and pneumococcal polysaccharide (Pneu-P-23) information and health promotion consistent with Canadian practice guidelines. |
| Advance care and goal planning | Consultation for advance care and goals of care planning, advanced care decisions and communication of care wishes. |
| Clinical pharmacist-led medication review | Review of medication for safety, efficacy and appropriate use of medications and delivery options. |
| Interprofessional team case rounds | Weekly or biweekly care team meeting to discuss care plan, update goals, and how to support changing care needs. |
| SBAR communication with primary care providers | SBAR formatted communication to effectively communicate disease relevant information and care updates to primary and specialist care providers. |
| Standardised ED transition package/personal care record | A succinct document to support continuity of care throughout health system. Personal care record of goals, plan of care and community supports. |
CARE, Collaboration Action Research and Evaluation; DIVERT, Detection of Indicators and Vulnerabilities of Emergency Room Trips; ED, emergency department; SBAR, situation, background, assessment, and recommendation.
Routine measurement
| Activity | Staff member | Approximate time to complete | Baseline | 2 months | 4 months | 6 months |
| Assess for eligibility (If intervention caseload) | Care coordinator | 5 min | X | |||
| Symptoms | Care coordinator | 15 min | X | X | X | X |
| Health-related quality of life | Care coordinator | 30 min | X | X | X | |
| Patient Activation Measure (PAM-13) | Care coordinator | 5 min | X | X | X | X |
| Administrative service and billing records (CHRIS, HCC MRR, CRMS) | N/A | N/A | X | X | X | X |
| Emergency department and hospital records (NACRS, DAD) | N/A | N/A | X | X | X | X |
PAM-13 (https://www.insigniahealth.com/products/pam-survey).
HCC MRR: Home and Community Care Minimum Reporting Requirements (https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/health/forms/5502datadictionary.pdf).
RAI-HC: Resident Assessment Instrument for Home Care (https://www.cihi.ca/en/home-care).
CHRIS: Client Health and Related Information System (https://hssontario.ca/Who/Pages/protecting-your-privacy.aspx).
CRMS: Client and Referral Management System (https://www.nlchi.nl.ca/images/ProvincialCRMS_Registration_User_Guide_v2_0_2017-09-01.pdf).
NACRS: National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (https://www.cihi.ca/en/national-ambulatory-care-reporting-system -metadata).
DAD: Discharge Abstract Database (https://www.cihi.ca/en/discharge-abstract-database -metadata).