Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Short-term post-operative complications after colon and rectal surgery present a known major clinical and financial burden for patients and hospitals. Focused efforts to reduce readmissions after colorectal surgery is one potentially high-yield and broad approach to address this problem since post- operative complications are the strongest predictor of readmissions. We focus on decreasing readmissions after ileostomy surgery by using a previously published intervention that prevents dehydration in the outpatient setting and decreases acute renal failure complications. We plan to introduce the SWIFT post op program for ileostomy patients at one academic and two community hospitals which are part of a single health care system, and to then randomize patients to usual care in the setting of this new program versus an aggressive compliance surveillance and improvement strategy (CSIS) strategy using study personnel. Our primary study outcome is all-cause 30-day readmission, and our secondary outcomes include patient satisfaction (CAHPS scores) and a cost-benefit analysis. We seek to create a partnership between colorectal surgeons, inpatient nurse managers and wound ostomy continence nurses (WOCN) at the three sites, linking them with outpatient nurse practitioners and physician's assistants at the respective colorectal surgery clinics who facilitate care-transition after hospital discharge.
Full description
At the start of the study, inpatient and outpatient nurses, physicians and physicians assistants will be oriented to the intervention in the study and will be suggested that the intervention is standard of care based on the following study:
Nagle D, Pare T, Keenen E, Marcet K, Tizio S, Poylin V*. Ileostomy Pathway Virtually Eliminates Readmissions for Dehydration in New Ostomates. Diseases of the Colon and Rectum 2012; 55: 1266-1272.
The intervention patients will be subject to a compliance surveillance and intervention strategy (CSIS) administered by study personnel to encourage the following and persist with telephone calls if the following have not been achieved.
The usual care arm will include no such surveillance.
The randomized study will be powered to detect a decrease in hospital readmission rates (all-cause) from 25% to 5%. Secondary outcomes include readmission due to dehydration and patient satisfaction (Surgical-CAHPS survey)
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
100 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal