Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This randomized control trial seeks to better understand the educational needs of Acute Coronary Symptom (ACS) patients including the optimal timing and method of delivery as well as linkages with appropriate community resources and supports are important for cardiac patients to self-manage post hospital discharge to improve outcomes. While there is some literature of the learning needs of ACS patients, there is a paucity of research related to the timing and preferred methods of delivery. This study aims to better understand how best to tailor care for ACS patients from hospital to community. Specifically, the investigators propose a 2 phased approach to understand the needs of patients, and then to develop and deliver a tailored approach to assess, educate and support patients both in-hospital and within the community. The intervention compares 1) a virtual remote home monitoring (RHM) platform and 2) Rapid Response Nursing (RRN) staff to follow, educate and support ACS patients post hospital discharge for a period of no more than 30 days.
The Primary Objective of this study is to safely transition low risk ACS patients, from hospital to home, with appropriate supports to safely self-manage in the community and to provide educational and community supports to improve post discharge outcomes of low risk ACS patients
Full description
Study design: 2 phase single center randomized, prospective pilot study
Phase 1) Evaluation of quality indicator results from discharge questionnaires from patients post ACS and a further investigation through patient engagement techniques about education, community support and quality of care. This process, comprising of patient collaborators/partners, will contribute to the study design, tool and resource development.
Phase 2) Randomized trial - Intervention (low risk 24-hour discharge support using Rapid Response nursing (RRN) vs low risk 24-hour discharge support using Remote Home Monitoring (RHM). Patients will be assessed using a trialed multipoint tool developed for this research study utilizing the cardiac, medical, community and patient risks. After assessment, low-risk patients will be randomized into the study. The study interventions will utilize either the RRN or the RHM to deliver education and support to patients post discharge.
Phase 1 - Patient Engagement Panel:
Patient engagement in research involves meaningful and active collaboration between patients and researchers throughout the different phases of a research project, including planning, data collection, data analysis, and knowledge translation. These collaborative meetings inform and guide study development. The central tenet of patient engagement in research is that, while clinicians and investigators have disease and research specific expertise, patients have expertise that stems from lived experience of their health issues. By sharing their experiences of the daily impact of disease and their perspectives regarding unmet needs, therapeutic burdens, balance of benefits and risks, and types of research questions most important to them, patients can transform the research process from one directed by investigators to one driven and informed by the needs of patients and their caregivers.
To generate information to refine the implementation plan of the study the investigators intend to recruit individuals to our Patient engagement panel who previously had ACS care and hospitalization at the St. Boniface Hospital and/or caregivers for the ACS patient. The investigators will construct panel members that reflect key demographic characteristics of our study's target population (including age, sex, gender, rural vs urban home location, and type of ACS) and other relevant selection criteria. These engagement activities will look to provide valuable insight into their experiences, while in-hospital and their transition back to the community, to help us develop patient centered education and post-discharge support. The investigators expect to generate patient and caregiver knowledge over 3 sessions within a 2-week period of time. Each session will be approximately 2 hours in length and will be mediated by research staff who have extensive experience in patient engagement. These sessions will either be in person or virtual, which will be dependent on participant needs.
From the patient engagement panel, The investigators will select 2 participants to become patient collaborators with our research team. These patients will provide information to help guide the refinement of study design, study procedures (e.g., recruitment methods, approaches to maximize education retention, use of accessible language in recruitment and study materials, and usability of technology), relevance of outcomes to patient concerns, data analysis (e.g., interpretation and contextualization of findings), and knowledge translation (e.g., alternate dissemination methods, use of accessible language, manuscript development). The anticipated lifespan of this patient- collaborators participation is from study planning through to the end of study knowledge translation (approximately 2 years) consisting of formal and informal meetings during this time period.
Phase 2 - Prospective Research:
Main Study Participants:After a successful PCI and assessing patients' risk criteria, patients who are considered low risk will be identified by the attending cardiology staff. Research staff will then be provided the names of these patients and they will then approach the patient for consent, prior to hospital discharge. Patients, upon consenting to the study, will be provided several questionnaires to complete and then randomized to one of two arms, the RRN arm or the RHM arm.
Low Risk Assessment Process (Hybrid):
The cardiology team at the St. Boniface Hospital will first utilize the Zwolle (STEMI) or the Grace (NSTEMI) scores to initially assess low medical risk for ACS patients. Both scores have been previously validated. 3-5 As many as 30 additional factors will be considered when completing the scoring for low-risk inclusion (Appendix 1). These factors include social, economic, cognitive, mental and physical dimensions.
Randomization:
Utilizing an online randomization tool (www.HTTPS//randomizer.org) participants who consent to the main study are assigned to either RRN intervention arm or the RHM intervention arm in a blocked 1:1 format.
Registry Participants Patients who fit the criteria for study inclusion and choose not to participate in the main study will be provided with an opportunity to consent to the registry arm of the study. The registry arm of the study is an opportunity to establish a standard of care group free from research bias. Patients who enroll in the registry will only need to complete a short questionnaire before they are discharged home which will take approximately 5 minutes. Additionally, research staff will also complete a medical chart review to identify specific medical information related to their demographics, cardiac procedure, hospital stay, recovery, and to identify any re-admissions to hospital that may have occurred after the patient has been discharged home.
Standard of Care:
Currently, education is delivered by several health care providers, including Nursing, Occupation and Physical Therapy, Pharmacy, Dieticians and Physicians. Delivery of the education material vary based on availability of health care providers and the length of time a patient is admitted to the hospital as well as timing of discharge (weekday vs weekend). Patients are discharged with educational material such as: Heart and Stroke's "Living well with Hearts Disease" booklet, information on Coronary angiograms and angioplasty/stents, and medication information sheets provided by pharmacy. A clinical decision is made by the health care team regarding whether the patient needs cardiology follow up. While most STEMI patients are referred to a cardiologist (if they don't already have one), the practice is variable for NSTEMI and unstable angina patients. This standard of care will continue to be provided to all ACS patients being discharged from the St. Boniface Hospital.
Intervention:
Education Development and Implementation:
Focused and adaptable educational material will be created to support the patients upon hospital discharge. This education and support component will either be administered by the Rapid Response Nurses (RRN) who will be delivering, in person or virtually, or the Remote Home Monitoring (RHM) system delivered virtually. Instead of routine education for all patients, through this intervention, the appropriate education will be provided at the appropriate time for patients based on their own learning needs. The existing educational material will be revised to be more digestible and using multiple methods of learning, including infographics, education, short summaries, etc. The education will be developed in coordination with patient and clinical teams. Further work throughout the patient engagement phase 1 needs to:
Rapid Response Nursing Team:
The RRNs will meet with study participants on 3 occasions. 1) 24 hours post hospital discharge, 2) 5-7 days post hospital discharge, and 3) 2-week post hospital discharge. While the initial visit will be in person, the next two visits may be in person or virtual (phone/tablet/computer) depending on patient preference. The RRN will help clients/patients to:
Remote Home Monitoring Platform:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
200 participants in 3 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
David Kent, MSc; Shuangbo Liu, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal