Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02354482

Achieving Patient-Centered Care and Optimized Health In Care Transitions by Evaluating the Value of Evidence

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
7,939 (actual)
Sponsor
Mark Williams · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Funded by the Patient Centered Outcome Research Institute (PCORI), nationally recognized leaders in health care and research methods are partnering with patients and caregivers to evaluate the effectiveness of current efforts at improving care transitions and develop recommendations on best practices for patient-centered care transitions and guidance for spreading them across the U.S.

Detailed description

Patients in the U.S. suffer harm too often as they move between sites of health care, and their caregivers experience significant burden. Unfortunately, the usual approach to health care does not support continuity and coordination during such "care transitions" between hospitals, clinics, home or nursing homes. Poorly managed patient care transitions can lead to worsening symptoms, adverse effects from medications, unaddressed test results, failed follow-up testing, and excess rehospitalizations and ER visits. Specific Aims: 1. Identify the transitional care outcomes and components that matter most to patients and caregivers. 2. Determine which evidence-based transitional care components (TCCs) or clusters most effectively yield patient and caregiver desired outcomes overall and among diverse patient and caregiver populations in different types of care settings and communities. 3. Identify barriers and facilitators to the implementation of specific TCCs or clusters of TCCs for different types of care settings and communities. 4. Develop recommendations for dissemination and implementation of the findings on the best evidence regarding how to achieve optimal TC services and outcomes for patients, caregivers and providers. Study Design: Capitalizing on the opportunity for a natural experiment observational study, the research team will conduct qualitative and quantitative studies. This 52-month study is divided into two distinct phases. During the first phase, Project ACHIEVE will use focus groups, with patients, caregivers, providers, and site visits to identify the transitional care outcomes and service components that matter most to patients. In this first phase, based on this information and an extensive evidence-based review of the research literature, the ACHIEVE team will develop surveys to be administrated in Phase II. The project team will conduct mail and phone surveys of patients and caregivers recruited from approximately 45 hospitals across the U.S. to assess what transitional care services patients and caregivers experience and how they are associated with outcomes. Additionally, the project team will conduct healthcare provider surveys and site visits to assess the facilitators and barriers to implementing transitional care strategies, organizational contexts (leadership and physician engagement, change culture, etc.), and community collaboration. Outcomes and Impact: Through rigorous study and evaluation, Project ACHIEVE will: 1. Identify best practices in care transitions that matter most to patients and their caregivers, and reduce excess emergency department and hospital utilization. 2. Develop a toolkit to guide informed decisions and spread these best practices across the U.S. 3. Develop Care Transitions Surveys that can standardize evaluation of patients' and caregivers' experience with care transitions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPatient Communication and Care ManagementReceived the following Transitional Care strategies: 1. Helpful Health Care Contact OR Symptom Management 2. Post-discharge Care Consultation 3. Patient Goal/Preference Assessment 4. Plain Language Communication in Hospital 5. Plain Language Communication at Home 6. Transition Summary for Patients and Family Caregivers
BEHAVIORALHome-Based Trust, Plain Language, and CoordinationReceived the following Transitional Care Strategies: 1. Transition Team 2. Home visits 3. Plain Language Communication at Home 4. Promote Trust at Home 5. Referral to Community Services 6. Follow-up Appointment
BEHAVIORALHospital-Based Trust, Plain Language, and CoordinationReceived the following Transitional Care Strategies: 1. Post-discharge care consultation 2. Identify High-Risk Patients and Intervene 3. Medication Reconciliation 4. Plain Language Communication in Hospital 5. Promote Trust in the Hospital 6. Transition Summary for Patients and Family Caregivers
BEHAVIORALPatient/Caregiver Assessment and Provider Information ExchangeReceived the following Transitional Care Strategies: 1. Patient Goal/Preference Assessment 2. Identify High-Risk Patients and Intervene 3. Timely Exchange of Critical Patient Information among Providers 4. Patient/Family Caregiver Transitional Care Needs Assessment
BEHAVIORALAssessment and Teach BackReceived the following Transitional Care Strategies: 1. Post-discharge care consultation 2. Language Assessment 3. Teach Back for Information and Skills
OTHERStandard of Care (Reference)No specific Transitional Care Strategy

Timeline

Start date
2015-03-01
Primary completion
2019-04-30
Completion
2019-06-30
First posted
2015-02-03
Last updated
2019-11-26
Results posted
2019-11-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02354482. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.