Some people living with health problems require extra support to properly manage their conditions, as family doctors are only able to spend limited time in the office with these patients. There are many resources and programs in the community that can provide the necessary time and support for these patients, yet many patients are unaware that such resources exist. Patient navigators have been shown to be useful in helping patients with certain conditions (such as cancer) to get to the resources they need, especially when they have social challenges that make it difficult for them to reach these programs (for example, language or transportation barriers, poverty, or poor social support). This study will look at how helpful Navigators are to link patients at family doctors' offices to community resources. To do this, family doctors' offices in Ottawa and Sudbury will be recruited. All offices will receive training on directing patients to CRs and will be assigned a patient navigator to support patients access CRs. Half of the patients referred to CRs by their providers will have access to the navigator (intervention) assigned to the practice. This study will assess whether access to a navigator increases patients' access to community health and social services compared to usual standard of care. In addition, the study aims to understand whether English and French speaking individuals are as likely to benefit from a navigator in accessing community resources in the language of their choice.
The proposed project builds on work conducted between 2013 and today. The Canadian Institutes of Health Research's Community Based Primary Health Care Team Grant SPOR initiative funded a five-year program of research (known as IMPACT: Innovative Models Promoting Access-to-Care Transformation, http://www.impactresearchprogram.com/). The goal of the IMPACT Project is to increase access to community-based primary health care for vulnerable populations. The lead for the Ontario arm of the IMPACT project, Simone Dahrouge, has undertaken a community engagement initiative within the Champlain Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) to understand the barriers patients face to adequately access community based health and social resources (CRs) and how these can be overcome. Under that funding, the team undertook an extensive consultation process to identify a regional priority gap, select and adapt an intervention, and implement and evaluate a single arm intervention. The investigators are currently in the last phase of that project, which is serving as a feasibility phase for the randomized controlled trial. The feasibility study is evaluating the acceptability, demand, implementation, adaption, integration, and practicality of the study intervention and related activities to optimize appropriate access to CRs for primary care patients. Enrolment for that project will be completed by March 2018. This study received ethics approval from the OHSN Research Ethics Board (Protocol #20160914-01H), Bruyère Continuing Care Research Ethics Board (Protocol #M16-1616-055), Hôpital Montfort Research Ethics Board (Protocol # SD-DP-27-02-17), and the University of Ottawa Research Ethics Board (Protocol # A05-17-04).That trial is a registered clinical trial: NCT03105635. During the feasibility phase the team established a regional stakeholder advisory group (Champlain LHIN). The composition of the advisory group has been adapted to meet the needs of the study. In the initial phase the composition was broad until the region identified the priority area and approach to addressing the gap. The committee is now composed of patients of various minority communities who contribute their lived experience, primary care providers from different care models and leaders from organizations responsible for community services (Community Care Access Centres and Community Health Centres) who inform the feasibility of the approach for each context, and best approach to integrating of the two sectors, health planners (the LHIN Primary Care Lead, senior integration specialist and others) who bring their broader context health services knowledge as well as resources (such as practice transformation facilitation services) to the project, as well as other stakeholders that inform specific components of the intervention (Ontario 211, Champlain Healthline). That Committee meets regularly and contributes directly to the direction of the study design, implementation, evaluation and dissemination. Because the committee fundamentally represents the interests of the region, it is often referred to in this document as 'the region". The initial consultative phase identified poor access to CRs as a priority access gap. The research team relied on a scoping review conducted for the IMPACT program and conducted several interviews and focus groups with community stakeholders to inform the best approach addressing this gap. The region selected to implement a patient navigator who can assist patients for whom the use of a community service is recommended by their primary care provider achieve access to that service. Primary care providers rarely make specific recommendations to access CRs; largely because they are unaware of these. They make general recommendations to improve healthy behaviours, but do not refer to specific types of services. Two realist reviews have been commissioned and completed by a team of experts to help us understand the critical success factors and shape our intervention. One review is focused on "community navigators" and the other on "primary care referral to community services" to help the team understand the factors that support us. This information was used to develop the ARC intervention. A number of themes identified in these reviews including training for clinical staff to identify and refer to relevant CRs to address patients' social barriers; implementing a champion within practice to integrate referral into usual care; use of electronic health records to prompt provider referral and share information between provider and the community; and developing a screening process and promotional material to prompt referral. As a result, the region developed the Access to Resources in the Community/Accès aux Resources Communautaires (ARC) intervention. The ARC project will build on this work by focussing on improving access to community resources in patients' language of choice and emphasizing access to French-language resources for Francophones in Ontario. PURPOSE The purpose of this project is to optimize appropriate access to community based services for socially complex primary care patients, including Franco-Ontarians living in minority situations, and promote the continuity of information across primary and community care. OBJECTIVES AND DELIVERABLES Objective A: Optimize equitable utilization of community based resources Deliverable 1: Effectiveness of a patient navigator on utilization of CRs Deliverable 2: Make policy recommendations to address remaining gaps Deliverable 3: Establish a model of navigation that is transferable and scalable. Objective B: Support continuity of information across Primary and Community Care Deliverable 4: Establish a process that support appropriate exchange of information across the two sectors
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
326
Navigators will support patients to access community based resources for healthy living and self-management, rather than providing specific information about health issues. Navigators will teach patients how to identify available and relevant programs to meet their health-related goals, in their language of choice. The navigator will ensure that the individual understands the reason for referral and potential benefits. They will discuss social barriers potentially affecting patients' access to community health resources, and assist patients to prioritize their health goals and relevant resources to achieve these. The navigator will then assist patients to access the community-based services in the language of their choice to which they have been referred. The navigator may assist the patient in making appointments, coordinating transportation, and/or accompaniment to resources as required).
Bruyere Research Institute
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Access to Community Resources
The primary outcome measure is access to CRs amongst the patients participating in the study. This outcome reflects the ability of the navigator to help patients overcome barriers to access and reach the community resource. We will assess this outcome in both arms (control and intervention) three months after enrolment in the study through a patient survey. The outcome will be a count of the CRs accessed (as a patient may access more than one CR).
Time frame: Three months
Ability of the intervention to address equity
Patient sociodemographic characteristics captured in the baseline survey (e.g. income, language, sex, age, immigration status) will be used to evaluate the intervention's success in supporting patients access the desired resource (main outcome variable) across various social strata.
Time frame: Baseline (i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) as well three months later, at the end of the patient three months intervention period
Needs/Difficulties
Section B in patient survey - related to ability to pay
Time frame: Baseline (i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) as well three months later, at the end of the patient three months intervention period
Use of Healthcare
Section B in patient survey - related to relationship with providers
Time frame: Baseline (i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) as well three months later, at the end of the patient three months intervention period
Ability to engage
Section C in the patient survey, one scale (including three concepts)
Time frame: Baseline (i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) as well three months later, at the end of the patient three months intervention period
Quality of Life VR-12
Section F in patient survey
Time frame: Baseline (i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) as well three months later, at the end of the patient three months intervention period
Health Action Process Approach
Section L in the patient survey - related to self efficacy and behaviour change
Time frame: Time Frame: baseline (i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) as well three months later, at the end of the patient three months intervention period
Patient Activation Measure
Section M of patient survey - related to knowledge, confidence, and motivation to access services
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) as well three months later, at the end of the patient three months intervention period
Community service evaluation
Section O in Patient Survey: used to evaluate whether the community service(s) were appropriate for the needs of the patient
Time frame: Assessed after the three month patient intervention period.
Navigator Assessment (intervention arm only)
An assessment of the Patient Navigator service received by patients in the intervention arm
Time frame: Assessed after the three month patient intervention period.
Attitudes with reference to vulnerable populations
An assessment of primary care providers attitudes with reference to socially vulnerable populations
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
Practices with reference to vulnerable populations
An assessment of primary care providers practices with reference to socially vulnerable populations
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
Knowledge with reference to vulnerable populations
An assessment of primary care providers' Knowledge with reference to socially vulnerable populations
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
Contextual factors (e.g., organizational structure)
An assessment of the organization's (primary care organizations) organizational structure (section B of Provider survey)
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
Change valence
Section C of the provider survey
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
Change Climate
Section D of the provider survey
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
Organizational readiness for change
Section E of Provider Survey; An assessment of the organization's readiness to implement the navigator intervention
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
Implementation effectiveness
Section F of Provider SurveyAn assessment of the effectiveness of the navigator intervention within the primary care practice
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
Experience with the Navigator
Section G of Provider Survey; An assessment of the providers' experience with the patient navigator, and how the intervention has affected their practice
Time frame: Baseline(i.e. the time of referrals (Pre-intervention) and 10 months into the study intervention period.
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