Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT03874767

Can Mobility Technicians Provide Value to Hospitalized Patients?

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Vanderbilt University Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The specific aim of this study is to determine the impact of the addition of a dedicated mobility technician to the care team on specialty specific outcomes for patients recovering from surgical treatment for a hip or lower extremity long bone fracture or a lung transplant. The practice of post-operative early ambulation has been shown to improve outcomes by promoting enhanced recovery after surgery in a variety of patients. To that end, VUMC is establishing a "Culture of Mobility". To do so, additional personnel are being hired to help ambulate patients with traumatic hip and femur fractures, other fractures of the lower extremity long bones, as well as those post-lung transplant or readmitted post-lung transplant based upon the best available evidence supporting mobility programs. The added personnel are needed as the currently available resources have insufficient bandwidth to ensure complete early ambulation for all patients. The relative effectiveness of adding a dedicated resource is assumed. Although the literature suggests adding person-hours increases the amount of mobility achieved, there is an opportunity to evaluate whether this is really the case. The goal of this study is to evaluate the impact of adding the mobility technician to the existing care team. The mobility technician will be assisting patients who could benefit from early ambulation after surgery. We hypothesize that by adding this staffing resource, more patients will get the appropriate level of usual care. Specifically, we expect that adding the resource increases the proportion of those patients who are receiving the prescribed amount of early ambulation post-surgery, with subsequent improvements in functional independence at discharge, and decreases length of stay since patients achieve readiness for discharge sooner.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPatient MobilityA team of two mobility technicians will switch between two units on a monthly basis. The unit staffed by the mobility technician will be referred to as the intervention unit, while the other will be referred to as the control unit. One unit will start as the control unit and will switch to being the intervention unit after one month. Similarly, the other unit will start as the intervention unit and will switch to becoming the control unit after one month. All patients present on a unit during the intervention period will be provided mobility technician support according to standardized clinical guidelines that have been developed by the care team and described below. Patients who are present on a unit at the time of cross-over will not be included in the analysis, but will either no longer receive mobility technician support (if crossing from intervention to control) or will start to receive mobility technician support (if switching from control to intervention).

Timeline

Start date
2022-12-01
Primary completion
2023-09-01
Completion
2023-09-01
First posted
2019-03-14
Last updated
2022-04-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03874767. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.