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Addressing Palliative Care Needs Among Intensive Care Unit Family Members (ICUconnect)

Duke University logo

Duke University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Family Members
Critical Illness
Informal Caregivers
Palliative Care
Psychological Distress

Treatments

Other: Usual care
Behavioral: Needs-focused mobile app

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03506438
Pro00090202
1U54MD012530 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The quality of palliative care is highly variable for many patients treated in intensive care units (ICUs) and their family members. To address these challenges, the investigators will test the impact of a mobile app designed to help families navigate ICU-based palliative care vs. usual care. The investigators hypothesize that the intervention will reduce patient/family member unmet palliative care needs and improve the quality of clinical-family communication in racially/ethnically diverse populations.

Full description

The quality of palliative care is highly variable in an intensive care unit (ICU) setting. These markers of poor quality are even more common among Black patients and families than among Whites. To address these challenges, the investigators developed a mobile app that allows families to both give and receive information relevant to palliative care and for ICU clinicians to visualize patient/family data and therefore better support them.

To determine the effect of this intervention,the investigators propose to conduct a randomized clinical trial (RCT) comparing the intervention to usual care to address four specific aims: (1) Using a cluster randomized clinical trial, determine the effect of the intervention vs usual care on unmet needs, psychological distress symptoms, and patient-centered care; (2) Determine the impact of the intervention on unmet needs and patient-centered care based across different racial groups; and (3) Explore family member and clinician experiences with intervention using mixed methods to understand mechanisms within unique case contexts [exploratory aim]. The investigators hypothesize that compared to usual care, ICUconnect will reduce family members' unmet needs, reduce family member psychological distress, increase the patient-centeredness care, and reduce hospital length of stay overall--though the magnitude of effect will be greater among Blacks compared to Whites

Enrollment

111 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

PATIENTS

Inclusion Criteria:

  • ≥18 years of age
  • Receive mechanical ventilation in a study ICU for ≥48 hours under care of a study ICU physician

Exclusion Criteria (pre-consent):

  • Decisional capacity
  • Death expected within 24 hours
  • Admission to an ICU at the index hospital >14 days
  • Comfort care or withdrawal of treatment planned
  • Imprisoned
  • Extubated and possess decisional capacity prior to informed consent
  • Died before T2 survey complete
  • No known family or surrogate
  • Care assumed by a non-study ICU attending after consent by patient/family but before T1
  • Care assumed by non-study ICU attending <3 days after T1 but before T2
  • Study ICU attending physicians from different groups (i.e., intervention or control) caring for patient change <3 days after T1 completed by family

Exclusion Criteria (post-consent):

  • Patient regains decision making capacity before T2
  • Patient dies before T2

FAMILY MEMBER

Inclusion Criteria:

  • ≥18 years of age
  • Self-described as the individual (related or unrelated) who provides the most support and with whom the patient has a significant relationship (per definition of 'family' described in the Society of Critical Care Medicine 2016 Guidelines for Family-Centered Care in the Neonatal, Pediatric, and Adult ICU)

Exclusion Criteria (pre-consent):

  • Lack a knowledge of English such that the potential participant is not confident that they could complete study tasks (app viewing, surveys)

  • Imprisoned

  • Unable to complete surveys for any reason

  • Describe their race as neither White nor Black*

  • Describe their ethnicity as Hispanic*

    • Note that this study explicitly targets issues of racial disparities in healthcare, particularly of Black / African-Americans. Hispanics are excluded because of the pervasive nature of US residents' general belief that 'Hispanic' is a racial category.

Exclusion criteria (post-consent):

  • If the assigned randomized ICU attending physician either leaves ICU service or is replaced by a non-participating ICU physician <= 2 calendar days after family member completes T1 survey
  • Low need burden (NEST score <15)*

ICU PHYSICIANS

Inclusion Criteria:

  • ≥18 years of age
  • Attending physician in a study ICU

Exclusion Criteria:

  • None

*The NEST score cutoff was changed on June 26, 2019. At this point, 3 patients had been randomized. This change was based on our review of data (NEST + psychological distress symptoms) from a parallel cohort study of >50 family members of ICU patients who met nearly identical eligibility criteria as for the ICUconnect trial. This was a larger cohort than the pilot study on which we based the NEST cutoff.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

111 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

ICU physician mobile app group
Experimental group
Description:
Clinicians and family members will receive access to versions of the needs-focused mobile app that differ in content.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Needs-focused mobile app
ICU physician usual care group
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Usual ICU care in an ICU as per the standards of the ICU attending
Treatment:
Other: Usual care

Trial documents
3

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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