| Literature DB >> 33109254 |
Chrysanthi Papoutsi1, Christine A'Court1, Joseph Wherton1, Sara Shaw1, Trisha Greenhalgh2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The SUPPORT-HF2 randomised controlled trial compared telehealth technology alone with the same technology combined with centralised remote support, in which a clinician responds promptly to biomarker changes. The intervention was implemented differently in different sites; no overall impact was found on the primary endpoint (proportion of patients on optimum treatment). We sought to explain the trial's findings in a qualitative evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: Complex intervention; Heart failure; NASSS framework; Qualitative study; Socio-technical theory; Telehealth
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33109254 PMCID: PMC7590600 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-020-04817-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Summary of data sources
| Site A | Site B | Site C | Site D | Site E | Site F | Site G | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11: consultant cardiologist/CI, trial manager, lead research nurse, 6 community HFSNs, bio-engineer, GP | 3: consultant cardiologist/PI, 2 research nurses | 4: research nurse, 3 HFSNs (1 hospital, 2 communities) | 1: research practitioner | 2: consultant cardiologist/PI, research administrator | 1: hospital HFSN | 1: consultant cardiologist/CI | 23 | |
| 4 (including 1 spouse) | 5 (including 1 spouse) | 4 | 3 | 0 | 5 | 21 | ||
| 7 (6 patients, 1 spouse) | 7 | |||||||
SUPPORT-HF2 study protocol Minutes of 5 meetings during the study set-up phase Minutes of a significant event review meeting (exploring the relationship between SUPPORT-HF2-driven drug up-titration and subsequent hospital admission) Approximately 50 email exchanges between site staff and researchers Approximately 10 emails between lead study nurse and researchers | Approx. 110 pages | |||||||
| Directly involved in the trial: 25 patients, 3 spouses, 4 consultant cardiologists who were also local principal investigators, 10 heart failure specialist nurses, 4 research nurses, 1 trial manager, 1 bioengineer, 1 research practitioner, 1 research administrator | 51 people | |||||||
Fig. 1The NASSS framework for studying non-adoption and abandonment of technologies by individuals and the challenges to scale-up, spread and sustainability of such technologies in health and care organisations (adapted from Greenhalgh et al. [14])
Cross-site comparison – contexts and implementation
| Site A: large city, South East England | Site B: major city, Northern Ireland | Site C: major city, East Midlands | Site D: rural, South West England | Site E: major city, North West England | Site F: urban area, South East England | Site G: major town, South England | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Consultant-led clinics and inpatient management Standard primary care diagnosis and ongoing management | |||||||
| Hospital HFSN team, community HFSN teams serving HFrEF only | Hospital and community HFSN teams | Hospital and community HFSN teams | Hospital and community HFSN teams | Community HFSN team in one part of CCG only | Hospital and community HFSN teams | No community HFSN team | |
| Chief investigator, secondary care HF nurses, SUPPORT HF trial team | Local PI, 2 research nurses | Local PI, secondary care-based lead HFSN and 2 communities | Local PI, secondary care HFSNs, 2 research practitioners | Local PI, research administrator | Local PI, secondary care-based HFSN | Local PI | |
| Study lead nurse recruited from wards or clinics, community HF nurses in the early phase only | Research nurse recruited from CCU and other wards or by letters sent out post-discharge | Recruited by lead HFSN then later by research nurse and community HFSNs from the clinic | 2 research practitioners, secondary care HFSNs and local PI recruited from wards and hospital clinics | By local PI in hospital clinic | By secondary care nurse in hospital clinic | By local PI in hospital clinic | |
| As per protocol, no specific distinction described. | As per protocol, no specific distinction described. | Patients were recruited only when ready for discharge from the hospital clinic or HFSN service. | As per protocol, no specific distinction described. | Patients were targeted if they were particularly unwell and deemed in need of monitoring between 6 monthly clinic visits. | In time, with appreciation of RCT design, staff avoided recruitment of any patients deemed too unstable for the control arm. | As per protocol, no specific distinction described. | |
| By CCM team | By local research nurse, supported by the CCM team | By local research nurse, supported by the CCM team | By local research nurse, supported by the CCM team | By CCM team | By CCM team | By CCM team | |
| Initially integrated, later separated due to role overlap | Limited: resistance from both hospital and community HFSNs and GPs | Partial: intention was for participants to be looked after by the CCM team, but sometimes, the hospital HFSN accessed patient data. | Partial: integrated with secondary care only as community HFSN service was resistant | Not integrated: following recruitment, participants were looked after by the CCM team. | Not integrated: following recruitment, participants were looked after by the CCM team. | Not integrated: following recruitment, participants were looked after by the CCM team. | |
Fig. 2Longitudinal weight readings entered by patient and active interventions recommended by central support staff based on the SUPPORT-HF algorithm