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CompletedNCT03810534

Connect-Home Clinical Trial

Connect-Home: Testing the Efficacy of Transitional Care of Patients and Caregivers During Transitions From Skilled Nursing Facilities to Home

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
654 (actual)
Sponsor
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study will test whether transitional care targeting care needs of seriously ill, skilled nursing facility (SNF) patients and their caregivers will help to improve SNF patient outcomes (preparedness for discharge, quality of life, function and acute care use) and caregiver outcomes (preparedness for the caregiving role. caregiver burden and caregiver distress).

Detailed description

Prior research has not established an evidence-based model of transitional care for seriously ill SNF patients (and their caregivers) who transfer from SNF to home-based care. Connect-Home, the intervention to be tested in this study, will use existing nursing home staff and community-based nurses to deliver transitional care in SNFs and the patient's home. The feasibility, acceptability, and estimated efficacy of Connect-Home was demonstrated in a pilot test of pre-discharge elements of Connect-Home (N=133 patients and their caregivers). Compared to controls, intervention participants were significantly more prepared for discharge (higher scores on Care Transitions Measure-15) and they more frequently received individualized plans for continuing care at home. Virtually all SNF staff participants (97%) recommended the intervention for future use, demonstrating its acceptability. The objective of this study is to test the efficacy of Connect-Home for seriously ill patients discharged to home and their caregivers. In this trial, intervention participants will receive the Connect-Home intervention; the intervention has two steps. While the patient is in the SNF, nurses, social workers and rehabilitation therapists will create an individualized Transition Plan of Care and prepare the patient and caregiver to manage the patient's serious illness at home. Within 24 hours of the time that the SNF patient discharges to home, a Connect-Home Activation Nurse (Activation RN) will visit the patient at home; the Activation RN will help the patient and family caregiver implement the written Transition Plan of Care. The Connect-Home intervention will focus on six key care needs: (1) home safety and level of assistance; (2) advance care planning; (3) symptom management; (4) medication reconciliation; (5) function and activity; and (6) coordination of follow-up medical care. In this trial, the control participants will receive usual discharge planning in the SNF only. Usual discharge planning for SNF patients includes assignment to an interdisciplinary team that develops discharge instructions for the patient to follow at home with oversight by a physician. Usual care does not include a structured home visit after the patient discharges to home. Patient and caregiver outcomes will assessed in 7, 30, and 60 days after the patient discharged from the SNF to home. Outcomes assessors will be blinded to study group.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALConnect-HomeConnect-Home will introduce organizational structure to support delivery of transitional care processes. New elements of structure include:electronic health record (EHR) template, Connect-Home Toolkit, and Staff Training. After structural elements are added, SNF staff will use Connect-Home care processes to deliver the 2-step transitional care intervention.In Step 1, SNF nurses, therapists, and social workers will develop a Transition Plan of Care and prepare the patient and caregiver to manage the patient's serious illness and functional needs. In Step 2, the Connect-Home Activation RN will visit the patient's home within 24 hours of discharge; the nurse will activate the Transition Plan of Care at home. Both intervention steps focus on 6 key care needs to optimize patient and caregiver outcomes: 1) home safety and level of assistance; 2) advance care planning; 3) symptom management; 4) medication reconciliation; 5) function and activity; and 6) coordination of follow-up medical care.

Timeline

Start date
2019-03-01
Primary completion
2021-07-24
Completion
2021-09-12
First posted
2019-01-18
Last updated
2022-08-23
Results posted
2022-08-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03810534. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.