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Hearing for Communication and Resident Engagement (HearCARE)

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University of Pittsburgh

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hearing Loss, Age-Related

Treatments

Other: Consult Model
Other: Engage Model

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04575051
STUDY19120233
HL-2019C1-16067 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Amplification is a well-established, evidence-based front-line treatment for those with impaired communication secondary to Age Related Hearing Loss (ARHL). ARHL is the most prevalent cause of communication impairment among older adults. The challenge in treating ARHL is identifying a care model that effectively promotes adherence to individualized-treatment recommendations allowing the end-user to self-manage hearing loss with appropriate support. This proposal compares the two most common models of care for ARHL provided to adults in assisted living/personal care communities. The Consult Model (i.e., usual care) is an acute care strategy, relying on a monthly Audiologist visit to the facility.

The Engage Model is a chronic care approach to support hearing loss self-management of ARHL. Engage includes (a) hearing screening for all residents, (b) an individualized communication plan for those with an identified hearing loss (e.g., one-to-one, group, telephone, television plans, hearing aid trouble shooting, communication strategies, etc.), (c) provision of simple, non-custom amplifiers, (d) referral to audiology if needed, and (e) ongoing support provided by trained personnel (Communication Facilitator) under the supervision of the audiologist.

Full description

The study is employing an open cohort stepped-wedge cluster randomized design with a phased, randomized roll out. The stepped wedge design is a useful design for the evaluation of complex health care interventions particularly when the intervention is believed to be beneficial with minimal risk. This design is increasingly being used to evaluate interventions involving health care delivery and has several advantages:

  1. allowing the clinical teams to roll out the intervention in a small number of facilities in a timely, systematic manner (interventions are not part of the research protocol)
  2. possibly increasing participation and buy-in since all facilities will eventually implement the intervention during the study
  3. possible increase in statistical power compared to a cluster randomized trial due to increase in data collection and within cluster comparisons.

Our intervention is applied at the facility level (cluster) but the primary outcomes are obtained at the resident level. In this open cohort design, all residents in a facility are identified to participate but some may leave the facility and others will move into the facility over the course of the study. The interventions are standard care at UPMC and are at the facility and individual level regardless of participation in the research project by any individual.

The 10 facilities participating in the study all currently receive the Consult Model of care. These same facilities are targeted to receive the Engage Model of care over the next three years as part of the standard care in these facilities. Residents enrolled in the study during any time period will be followed until the end of the study or until they are no longer a resident of the facility, whichever comes first. This implies that crossover to the intervention is not only at the facility level but also the resident level. Once the intervention is available at a facility, residents will be exposed to the intervention continuously regardless of enrollment for the study measures. The resident level outcomes of satisfaction with social participation and hearing-specific HRQoL will be measured every 5 months for the duration of the study. In addition, staff satisfaction and family burden will be surveyed every 5 months.

NOTE: The clinicaltrials.gov record was updated after data collection ended to correct the study arms and interventions. The study arms were originally and incorrectly documented in clinicaltrials.gov as the resident, caregiver, and staff cohorts rather than the interventions.

Enrollment

684 patients

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Willingness to participate and
  • Being a resident, staff member or family member of a resident at one of the participating Assisted Living/Personal Care Facilities.

Exclusion criteria

  • Unwillingness to participate
  • Not being a Resident, staff member or family member of a resident at one of eight Assisted Living/Personal Care Facilities.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

684 participants in 2 patient groups

HearCARE (Consult+Engage)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Residents will be exposed to the Consult Model and the Engage Model.
Treatment:
Other: Engage Model
Other: Consult Model
Consult Model
Other group
Description:
The Consult Model (i.e., usual care) is an acute care strategy, relying on a monthly Audiologist visit to the facility.
Treatment:
Other: Consult Model

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Catherine Palmer, PhD; Erin Gilchrist, BS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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