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In a hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation trial, our three-center research teams aim to examine whether empowering adults with sickle cell disease (SCD) with patient-facing SCD-specific guidelines through an mHealth application with booklets will decrease acute healthcare utilization and be cost-effective over booklets with the guidelines alone. Our team, head will test our hypotheses with the following aims: Aim 1: evaluate the effectiveness of the patient-facing guidelines mHealth app + booklet intervention to decrease acute healthcare utilization (hospitalizations, emergency room visits, and day hospital visits) in adults with SCD over the standard care in a randomized controlled trial, Aim 2: evaluate the implementation outcomes of the mHealth app + booklet using the capability, opportunity, and motivation-behavior (COM-B) and reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance (RE-AIM) frameworks, and Aim 3: evaluate the cost-effectiveness of patient-facing mHealth app + booklets vs. standard care in adults with SCD. is hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial design, according to the COM-B and RE-AIM frameworks with a mixed-methods approach, will give valuable insights into the effects, facilitators, and barriers to the implementation that will influence the effects of the patient-facing guidelines intervention.
Full description
The investigators propose a multi-center hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation trial to assess patient-facing evidence-based guidelines through a mHealth application plus (+) booklets in adults with sickle cell disease (SCD). Clinicians' care of SCD is informed by evidence-based guidelines, which can prevent morbidity and mortality. The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and the American Society of Hematology (ASH) published guidelines for evidence-based management of SCD for healthcare providers. However, patient, provider, or system barriers prohibit adequate reach within and across all three domains, leading to poor guideline adherence. Our prior work demonstrates 1) the patient's lack of knowledge of evidence-based guidelines, 2) the desire for guidelines to be patient-centered, accessible, and actionable in booklets and a mHealth app, 3) the development of patient-facing booklets with the guidelines and 4) the successful pilot of an engaging mHealth app with the guidelines that adults with SCD will use. Promising preliminary data from our multi-center feasibility randomized controlled trial support using a mHealth app + booklets with patient-facing guidelines for reducing acute healthcare utilization in adults with SCD. In the feasibility trial, the investigators screened 74 participants; 91% (67 of 74) agreed to be recruited and randomized to mHealth + booklet vs. booklets alone. A relative risk reduction of 44% occurred in acute healthcare utilization in the mHealth + booklet arm vs. the booklet alone arm. A total of 75% (50 of 67) of the participants agreed to be followed for six months to assess healthcare utilization and surveys of knowledge and patient-reported outcomes. Based on our preliminary trial results indicating a decrease of at least 44% in acute healthcare utilization (a decrease of 1.5 emergency room visits or hospital admissions per year) with mHealth + booklet, the investigators propose a three-center randomized controlled trial to test the following hypothesis: There will be a 44% relative risk reduction of acute healthcare utilization in adults with SCD (n=272), randomly allocated to mHealth app + booklets vs. standard care, defined as general guidance without patient-facing educational materials, for 12 months. The aims of this proposed study are Aim 1: evaluate the effectiveness of the patient-facing guidelines mHealth app + booklet intervention to decrease acute healthcare utilization (hospitalizations, emergency room visits, and day hospital visits) in adults with SCD over the standard care in a randomized controlled trial, Aim 2: evaluate the implementation outcomes of the mHealth app + booklet using the capability, opportunity, and motivation-behavior (COM-B) and reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance (RE-AIM) frameworks, and Aim 3: evaluate the cost-effectiveness of patient-facing mHealth app + booklets vs. standard care in adults with SCD. This hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial design, according to the COM-B and RE-AIM frameworks with a mixed-methods approach, will give valuable insights into the effects, facilitators, and barriers to the implementation that will influence the effects of the patient-facing guidelines intervention.
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Inclusion criteria for adults with SCD include
Inclusion criteria for the providers and staff members are
(1) to be involved in participants' clinical care
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287 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Robert M Cronin, MD, MS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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