This research is an evaluation of the MMHU compared to standard care. Patients who are over 65 and 'confused' at admission will be randomly allocated to the MMHU or standard care. The MMHU does not have capacity for all confused older patients admitted to NUH, and random allocation is similar to what happens in practice currently. For this study, 480 of these patients will be recruited, together with a carer (240 from the MMHU, 240 from standard care wards). The investigators will collect baseline information about the patient participant's physical and mental health and disability. The investigators will count the total days spent at home and measure patient participants' health status after 3 months, and use of resources over six months. Carer strain and quality of life will be measured at baseline and follow up.
The objectives of this study are: 1. To evaluate whether a specialist multidisciplinary MMHU for older people with 'confusion', admitted to a general hospital as an emergency, is associated with better outcomes than standard care. 2. To study the quality of care on the MMHU compared with standard care 3. To perform a health economic analysis, from the perspective of health and social care. The principal hypotheses being tested are: * That care on the MMHU is associated with more days spent at home (in the 3 months after recruitment) than care on standard wards * That care on the MMHU is associated with better health status measured at 3 months, in terms of quality of life, behavioural disturbance, cognitive function, disability, participation, mortality and care home residence. * That care on the MMHU is associated with better psychological well being amongst carers and reduced carer strain compared with standard care. * That the quality of care and patient experience for patients on the MMHU is superior to that on standard care wards. * That care on the MMHU is cost-effective compared with that on standard care wards. The setting for the study is a large NHS acute teaching hospital organisation with 2 campuses (Queens Medical Centre and City Hospital), comprising 1800 beds, serving a population of 700 000 for general hospital services. Sample size is determined by available resources. 240 patients randomised to the MMHU unit over 24 months, and an equal number of controls, should be sufficient to measure, with 80% power, a 3 to 6-day reduction in length of stay, and 15% increase in the proportion of participants discharged home (e.g. 50% to 65%). Power will be greater for scaled outcomes, and the 'days at home' outcome. The main study will run for up to 24 months from July 2010. Follow up will be 3 months after randomisation. Prior to trial commencement we will run 1 or 2 short pilot studies, during which we will test the recruitment and ward allocation processes. The study is designed to be robust, despite being constrained by the operational needs of the clinical service, and both service and research capacity. The NHS Trust clinical service has agreed that, for the duration of the study, allocation to the MMHU will be by randomisation. This is not part of the research, but represents clinical service support for it. Potential participants will be identified by the Acute Medical Unit, on simple criteria (''confused', over 65'). The MMHU will confirm clinical eligibility and complete a screening log. If there is a bed available on MMHU the patient will be randomised using an internet based randomisation system (with stratification on care home residence), and the patient assigned to MMHU or a standard care ward. Non-randomised patients can be referred, and, if appropriate, randomised, later in their hospital stay. Research eligible patients and carers will be invited to participate in research, once on their allocated ward. Consent and participation will be for data collection, observation of care, and follow up only. Excluded patients will continue on their allocated ward outside the trial.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
600
A specialist medical and mental health unit with both physician and psychiatric medical and nursing staff, and mental health experienced therapists. Emphasis will be on early and accurate diagnosis, multidisciplinary management, rigorous communication and goal setting, discharge planning and interface with community services.
Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust
Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom
Number of days at home in the 3 months after randomisation
The primary outcome will be number of days spent at home in the three months following recruitment (or remaining in a care home for those previously resident at recruitment). This encompasses mortality, discharge, length of hospital stay, and ability to sustain discharge and avoid readmission. 'Days at home' will be calculated as 90 days minus the nuimber of days spent dead, in residential intermediate care units, in hospital, in respite care or in a new care home placement at a higher level of dependency.
Time frame: 3 months
Quality of life
Dementia quality of life (Demqol, patient and proxy) and generic quality of life (Euroqol EQ5D).
Time frame: 3 months
Behavioural disability
Neuropsychiatric inventory.
Time frame: 3 months
Mortality
Time frame: 3 month
Personal activities of daily living
Barthel ADL Index
Time frame: 3 months
Participant / generic disability
short London Handicap Scale
Time frame: 3 months
Cognition
MMSE, in particular to detect recovery of delirium
Time frame: 3 months
Carer satisfaction with hospital care
Satisfaction with care received questionnaire
Time frame: 1-3 weeks post discharge from index admission
Carer strain and general health
Carer strain index and carer general health questionnaire GHQ-12.
Time frame: 3 months
Service Outcomes
Days in each type of ward. Hospital re-admissions, and total hospital length of stay. New institutionalisation (or moving to a higher level of dependency for those in a care home) Days in a care home (including respite care) GP visits, and use of other primary care contacts (district nurse, community matron, practice nurse) Hospital appointments Attendances at physical and mental health day hospitals Contact with community mental health teams (including community psychiatric nursing) Use of ambulance service Use of social service home care and day centres.
Time frame: 3 months
Quality of care and patient experience on the ward
Quality of care and patient experience will be measured using Dementia Care Mapping on both the MMHU and standard care. Dementia Care Mapping provides a structured record of activity levels, mood and engagement of participants and the quality of staff interactions over a 4-6 hour period.
Time frame: During hospital stay.
Health and social care costs
Service outcomes will be costed using specific costs where available or standard reference costs otherwise.
Time frame: 3 months
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.