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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04868656

Implementing a Hospital-Based Walking Program (STRIDE): Function QUERI 2.0

Implementing a Hospital-Based Walking Program (STRIDE): Function QUERI 2.0 (QUE 20-023)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
35 (actual)
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development · Federal
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Implementing a Hospital-Based Walking Program (STRIDE): Function QUERI 2.0 aims to compare implementation strategies for large-scale spread of STRIDE, a supervised walking program for hospitalized older Veterans. The overall goal is to implement, evaluate, and sustain STRIDE in 32 additional VA hospitals using a type III effectiveness-implementation hybrid design framework.

Detailed description

Background/Purpose. Hospitalization is a major risk factor for development of disability. More than one-third of adults over the age of 70 are discharged from the hospital with a major new disability that was not present before the onset of acute illness. A key contributor to hospital-associated disability is immobility during hospitalization. Although fewer than 5% of patients have physician orders for bed rest, hospitalized older adults spend only about 3% of their time standing or walking. The hazards of bedrest have been recognized for more than 2 decades, but there remains a persistent 'epidemic of immobility' in American hospitals. STRIDE is a supervised inpatient walking program developed by an interdisciplinary team of investigators, clinicians and administrators at the Durham VA and funded by the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care. STRIDE is designed for patients aged \>= 60 years and consists of a one-time gait and balance assessment, followed by daily walks supervised by a mobility assistant for the duration of the hospital stay. Clinical demonstration of STRIDE conducted at the Durham VA resulted in a greater likelihood of discharge to home than to skilled nursing or rehabilitation among STRIDE participants compared to clinically similar patients receiving usual care. Based on this experience, the cumulative evidence of the positive impact of early mobility interventions, and successful spread to other hospitals, STRIDE has the potential to become a system-wide approach to address hospital-associated disability in VA. As part of Implementing a Hospital-Based Walking Program (STRIDE), the investigators plan to implement the STRIDE clinical program at an additional 32 VA hospitals using a type III effectiveness-implementation hybrid design framework with hospitals enrolled and randomized to receive low-touch implementation support (foundational support) or a higher-intensity implementation support (enhanced support including additional facilitation, self-organization, and team building support) for hospitals that do not meet program benchmarks at 6 and 8 months. Objectives. The investigators plan to develop scalable approaches to implement and sustain STRIDE as well as evaluate implementation with foundational support versus the enhanced-implementation strategy (enhanced support). Key questions: How should the STRIDE clinical program be adapted to optimize sustainability? Are there differences in implementation outcomes (penetration, fidelity) at 10 months (primary), 13, 16 months between arms? How do hospitals experience implementation strategies in each arm? What baseline organizational characteristics are associated with hospitals that do not meet implementation benchmarks? The investigators also plan to conduct an explanatory sequential mixed method design that includes qualitative data collection and analysis that will not be reported here. Additionally, adoption will be examined at 10 months. Methodology. To evaluate implementation, the investigators will randomize hospitals (n=32) 1:1 to either foundational support or enhanced support. The investigators will use generalized linear models to examine the effect of foundational vs. enhanced on implementation outcomes at 10-months.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERImplementation Strategy: Foundational SupportThe goal is to test implementation intensification approaches for STRIDE hospitals that have not met implementation program benchmarks, specifically Foundational Support vs. Enhanced Support. We propose that low intensity implementation support that promotes adapting STRIDE for context and provides tools for ongoing STRIDE evaluation (defined as foundational support), will be sufficient for some but not all hospitals to successfully incorporate STRIDE into routine practice.
OTHERImplementation Strategy: Enhanced SupportThe goal is to test implementation intensification approaches for STRIDE hospitals that have not met implementation program benchmarks, specifically Foundational Support vs. Enhanced Support. We posit that monitoring hospitals' progress and adding, for hospitals with low adoption, higher intensity strategies (defined as Enhanced Support) that directly influence teams' capacity and skills to effectively self-organize and problem-solve will lead to higher implementation adoption, penetration, fidelity, and value.

Timeline

Start date
2021-06-01
Primary completion
2024-01-26
Completion
2024-01-26
First posted
2021-05-03
Last updated
2025-05-01
Results posted
2025-05-01

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04868656. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.