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This randomized pilot study proposes to field-test key logistical aspects of studying an intervention already available to patients on the pediatric ward, namely a discharge medication delivery service, called "Meds-in-Hand," which has been refined via a quality improvement process, but not rigorously studied nor fully implemented.
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At this time, Meds-in-Hand is not currently utilized for approximately 40% of patients admitted to the pediatric ward at Boston Medical Center. Currently patients do not receive their discharge medications via the delivery service for a variety of reasons, however they continue to receive the usual care standard employed by most hospitals, where prescriptions are sent to their home pharmacy for pickup after discharge. This study does not change the actual medications patients receive, but how and when they get them. Rigorous study of the relationship between Meds-in-Hand and patient satisfaction and clinical outcomes has not been performed to date, so there is equipoise about the value of the intervention, however observational data in the population in question, namely children admitted for an asthma exacerbation, suggest that patients who receive Meds-in-Hand prior to discharge have a reduced likelihood of a return visit to the Emergency Department in 30 days. The study will focus on parent-patient dyads admitted with an asthma exacerbation where the child is aged 2-17 years, however parents will be the exclusive study subjects. Parents of the patients will be asked a baseline, in-hospital survey as well as participate in phone follow-up interviews to report on the patient experience and parent-reported child health outcomes at approximately 3 and 30 days after leaving the hospital. 60 total parents will be enrolled, 30 in each arm of the study. This pilot study will also obtain empiric estimates of key study parameters to inform future study design and begin to examine trends between the groups of patients who are randomized to the Meds-in-Hand intervention and those randomized to usual care.
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23 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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