| Literature DB >> 32119926 |
Hannah Scheuer1, Allison Engstrom2, Peter Thomas3, Rddhi Moodliar4, Kathleen Moloney5, Mary Lou Walen6, Peyton Johnson7, Sara Seo8, Natalie Vaziri9, Alvaro Martinez10, Ronald Maier11, Joan Russo12, Stella Sieber13, Pete Anziano14, Kristina Anderson15, Eileen Bulger16, Lauren Whiteside17, Patrick Heagerty18, Lawrence Palinkas19, Douglas Zatzick20.
Abstract
Annually approximately 2-3 million Americans are so severely injured that they require inpatient hospitalization. The study team, which includes patients, clinical researchers, front-line provider and policy maker stakeholders, has been working together for over a decade to develop interventions that target improvements for US trauma care systems nationally. This pragmatic randomized trial compares a multidisciplinary team collaborative care intervention that integrates front-line trauma center staff with peer interventionists, versus trauma team notification of patient emotional distress with mental health consultation as enhanced usual care. The peer-integrated collaborative care intervention will be supported by a novel emergency department exchange health information technology platform. A total of 424 patients will be randomized to peer-integrated collaborative care (n = 212) and surgical team notification (n = 212) conditions. The study hypothesizes that patient's randomized to peer integrated collaborative care intervention will demonstrate significant reductions in emergency department health service utilization, severity of patient concerns, post traumatic stress disorder symptoms, and physical limitations when compared to surgical team notification. These four primary outcomes will be followed-up at 1- 3-, 6-, 9- and 12-months after injury for all patients. The Rapid Assessment Procedure Informed Clinical Ethnography (RAPICE) method will be used to assess implementation processes. Data from the primary outcome analysis and implementation process assessment will be used to inform an end-of-study policy summit with the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma. The policy summit will facilitate acute care practice changes related to patient-centered care transitions over the course of a single 5-year funding cycle. Trial registration: (Clinicaltrials.govNCT03569878).Entities:
Keywords: Collaborative care; Emergency department information exchange; PTSD; Patient-centered care; Peer; Trauma care systems
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32119926 DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2020.105970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Contemp Clin Trials ISSN: 1551-7144 Impact factor: 2.226