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Transport PLUS Intervention

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Mount Sinai Health System

Status

Completed

Conditions

Fall, Accidental
Emergency Medical Services
Hospital Readmission
Fall

Treatments

Behavioral: Transport PLUS group

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03046771
GCO 14-1842
1R03AG050917-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Hypothesis: 'Transport PLUS,' a low cost, easily generalizable intervention performed by Emergency Medical Technicians while transporting a patient home from the hospital, can improve transitions of care and improve patient safety following hospitalization as measured by decreased rates of falls and reduced rates of return to the hospital.

Full description

The moment of transition between the hospital and the home is susceptible to lapses in quality and loss of key information regarding a patient's care. An increasing amount of attention is being given to improving the transition of care by targeting factors that contribute to return Emergency Department (ED) visits and readmissions. Following a hospitalization, as many as 40% of patients over age 60 will experience a fall in the subsequent six months and 76% of older adult patients are uncertain about their follow-up care plan. Patients transported home by ambulance following an ED visit were found to have a significantly higher rate of return ED visits at 30 days then overall rates for older adult ED patients (27.8% vs. 11.5%).

In response to these challenges, the researcher's study group developed and piloted an innovative care model known as "Transport PLUS" in which specially trained emergency medical technicians (EMTs) who are already transporting an older adult (65+ years in age) patient home from the ED add to their service two simple interventions - a home fall hazard assessment (FHA) and a discharge comprehension assessment (DCA). Both interventions are facilitated and measured using a checklist developed through a systematic review of the literature and existing tools, and later refined through EMT and patient focus groups.

This study will test the hypothesis that 'Transport PLUS,' a low cost, easily generalizable intervention, can improve transitions of care and improve patient safety following hospitalization as measured by decreased rates of falls and reduced rates of return to the hospital.

The researchers will conduct a pilot cluster randomized controlled trial comparing the Transport PLUS intervention to standard care in a population of older adult patients being discharged from the hospital. The researchers will randomize EMS providers to either perform Transport PLUS (the intervention) or to provide routine transport. It is estimated that approximately 400 patients over age 65 will be transported home from the study hospital by participating providers during the study enrollment period. Patient participants will receive Transport PLUS (n=200) or routine care (n=200) as determined by the transporting provider. Primary outcomes will be the rate of falls in the 3 months following hospitalization and 3-day and 30-day return ED visits (with or without a hospitalization). Process measures will include removal of fall hazards at 3 months and compliance with discharge instructions. Extending beyond the grant period, the researchers intend to follow the cohort for up to 1 year.

Enrollment

58 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) are eligible to participate in study if

  • employed by Hunter EMS
  • over the age of 18 years, and
  • certified as an EMT in New York State.

Patient participants are eligible if

  • over the age of 65 years
  • being discharged from the study hospital, and
  • being transported directly to home.

Exclusion criteria

  • EMTs who expect to leave the job in less than 1 year
  • EMTs who have been previously trained in Transport PLUS.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

58 participants in 2 patient groups

Transport PLUS group
Experimental group
Description:
EMTs randomized to the Transport Plus group will view a 60-minute training video and then complete a 60-minute simulation training exercise on how to conduct the home fall hazard assessment (FHA) and the discharge comprehension assessment (DCA) and how to complete the FHA and DCA checklists. The FHA involves performing a visual assessment of the home environment and noting certain fall hazards. The DCA involves engaging the patient or caregiver in a conversation to assess their level of understanding of the elements of the discharge instructions. The Transport Plus EMTs will offer to perform the FHA and DCA for all transports of patients aged 65 or older, who are being transported from The Mount Sinai Hospital to a private residence
Treatment:
Behavioral: Transport PLUS group
Routine Care
No Intervention group
Description:
Providers randomized to routine care will not be trained on the FHA or DCA or the completion of the checklists. All EMTs in both groups (Transport Plus and standard education), will be asked to answer some demographic questions and will be trained to collect responses to 3questions commonly used to assess a patient's risk of falling and to collect best contact information for phone follow up from patients or their caregivers and to obtain permission for a follow-up phone call from research personnel.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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