Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT03970174

Care Transition Patient Experience Study With Electronic Tool

Evaluating the Impact of an Electronic Communication Tool on Patient Experience, ED Visits and Re-hospitalization, and Care Transitions in Hospitalized Patients (Including Those With Dementia): a Mixed Methods Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
240 (estimated)
Sponsor
Trillium Health Partners · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Patients being admitted to hospital are becoming more complex and they often require a team of health professionals (doctors from different disciplines, nurses, and allied health professionals) working together to meet their needs. Effective communication among this team and with patients is essential to providing high quality patient-centered care. Care Connector is an electronic tool that was developed to help health professionals communicate about patient care with each other. It also incorporates best practice whenever possible (such as the used of Patient Oriented Discharge Summary \[PODS\] developed at University Health Network) during care transitions. We want to understand whether using electronic tools can address the communication issues faced by patients/families, and whether they impact on repeat visits to the Emergency Department or the hospital after discharge. In this study, we will be asking patients and families who have recently been discharged from hospital to describe their experience with communication and care transitions through a brief telephone survey. All of them will be discharged from units where Care Connector was used. However, some of the units would have used the PODS feature while others will not. A small group will also be invited to participate in an in-depth telephone interview. The results of this study will be used to improve Care Connector and to enhance communication and patient experience in general.

Detailed description

In this mixed methods study, we examine how electronic tools impact patient/family experience of communication in hospital and care transitions from hospital to home. Care Connector is an electronic interprofessional communication and collaboration platform initially designed to address communication challenges faced by interprofessional care team. It has been augmented to support care transitions through a care transition module (that include the generation of provider-facing discharge summary and PODS). This study examines the impact of this care transition module on patient/family experience of in-hospital communication and care transitions. The quantitative component is a controlled study where baseline data is collected on 4 medicine wards. The care transition module is then introduced to 2 of the 4 medicine wards (intervention) while the other 2 (control) wards continue to operate without the explicit use of the care transition module. Data is then collected again on all 4 wards to understand impact of patient/family experience, as well as objective outcomes of ED visits and re-admission within 30 days. A number of care transition process measures will also be obtained. In the qualitative component, we will interview patients/families, as well as healthcare providers to understand how technology can or cannot address these issues.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCare Connector care transition moduleCare Connector is an electronic interprofessional communication and collaboration tool. Its features include Physician Sign-Out, documentation, interprofessional care planner, messaging, and flow planner. The newest module is a care transition module which allows physicians to electronically generate discharge summaries as well as incorporation of allied health recommendation, but also will pull information into the PODS (Patient Oriented Discharge Summary) format designed by University Health Network. This results in a patient friendly discharge instruction sheet that can be provided to patient. The intervention arm will have access to the care transition feature, while the control wards do not.

Timeline

Start date
2018-02-02
Primary completion
2019-07-31
Completion
2020-06-30
First posted
2019-05-31
Last updated
2020-03-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03970174. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.