Home Nurse Visit post discharge.
To identify barriers to successful transitions that are most meaningful to patients and families, and use these identified barriers to iteratively adapt an existing nurse home visit program to address these barriers. This study will also test the efficacy of a nurse home visit intervention in improving post-discharge outcomes through a randomized controlled trial.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
1,500
We will complete a single center, parallel, randomized, standard-of-care-controlled prospective study to determine the efficacy of a nurse home visit program, an intervention adapted from those studied in other populations (i.e., adults, high-risk infants) and re-engineered through Aim 2, in improving pediatric patient transitions from hospital to home
Control patients will be randomized to receive standard-of-care at discharge. This care at our institution includes pediatric hospitalist to PCP (primary care physician) verbal and written communication prior to discharge, written documentation for the family regarding prescribed medication regimen, recommended follow-up with outpatient PCP and relevant consultant(s), and delivery of prescribed medications from the hospital pharmacy to the patient's bedside.
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Number of Participants With Any Occurrence of Unplanned Re-hospitalization and/or Any Emergency/Urgent Care Visits Within 30 Days of Hospital Discharge
The dependent variable will be a dichotomized indicator of any occurrence of unplanned rehospitalization and/or any emergency department/urgent care visit within 30-days post-discharge (i.e. unplanned reutilization). Differences in this outcome between intervention and control groups will be evaluated using logistic regression with the stratification variables (neighborhood poverty and complex versus noncomplex teams) included in the model.
Time frame: 30 days post-discharge
Post Discharge Coping Difficulty Scale
Post-Discharge Difficulty Coping Scale (Weiss, et. al) measured at 14 day post-discharge phone call. Post-Discharge Coping Difficulty Scale uses an 11 point scaling format (0-10) with total scores ranging from 0 to 100. Higher scores represent greater coping difficulty.
Time frame: 14 days post-discharge
Days Until Normalcy
Number of days until normalcy: measured at post discharge phone call. Parents asked to recall the number of days it took to "return to a 'normal' routine" including the return to work and school (with option of not yet be back to normal).
Time frame: 14 days post-discharge
Red Flags Remembered
This was measured at the 14 day post-discharge phone call survey. Parents were asked to recall "any red flags or warning signs" to indicate the "child's condition was getting worse." The number of red flags recalled could range from 0-10 depending on the template used. The template was a home visit guideline for nurses to use that was specific to the child's illness. For example, if the child had bronchiolitis the nurse would use the template "bronchiolitis/croup/pneumonia" to guide them through the visit. Higher values (i.e., the greater number of red flags remembered) represent a better outcome.
Time frame: 14 days post-discharge
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Number of Participants With Occurrence(s) of an Unplanned Readmission Within 30 Days Post-discharge
Occurrence(s) of an unplanned readmission within 30 days post-discharge.
Time frame: 30 days
Number of Participants With Occurrence(s) of an Emergency Department Visit Within 30 Days Post-discharge
Occurrence(s) of an ED visit within 30 days post-discharge
Time frame: 30 days
Number of Participants With Occurrence(s) of 14-day Unplanned Healthcare Utilization
Occurrence(s) of 14-day unplanned healthcare utilization defined by unplanned re-hospitalization and/or any emergency/urgent care visit within 14 days or parent report of an unplanned visit to one of these places. Parent report is collected at the 14 day follow-up phone call.
Time frame: 14 days post-discharge