This is a feasibility trial utilizing a step wedge design of a social worker led palliative care intervention for 120 adult patients with advanced medical illness being cared for in a subacute nursing facility. Caregivers are also invited to participate.
Of the nearly 800,000 seniors admitted to Skilled Nursing Facilities for rehabilitation (SNF rehab) annually in the U.S., approximately 20% will be newly institutionalized, 25-50% are readmitted back to the hospital within 30 days at a cost of $4.34 billion, and 9% will die in the next year. Clearly this population represents an ideal target for palliative care interventions such as decreasing symptom burden, improving quality of life, and ensuring that the medical care provided is congruent with patient goals and preferences. Unfortunately, health professionals working in the SNF rehab setting are rarely trained in palliative care. While the current standard of care in the SNF rehab setting typically includes social service assessment and case management, the care plans developed are frequently focused only on immediate, short-term issues and are not communicated as the patient is discharged to a different level of care. Existing literature supports the need to assist patients in navigating care transitions through standardized systems and patient/family activation. However, the transition from hospital to SNF and from SNF to community has received little attention, even though these are some of the most complex patients at high risk for poor outcomes. The broad goal of the research team is to optimize care for high-risk seniors admitted to SNF rehab by using a social work led, therapeutic intervention designed to align goals of care and improve communication across multiple care settings. ALIGN (Assessing \& Listening to Individual Goals and Needs), a palliative social work led intervention, focuses on defining patient and caregiver goals and values through an ecological assessment with standardized monitoring and reassessment, providing education about disease trajectory, facilitating communication between the patient and the care team, and developing a patient-centered care plan that accompanies the patient across all future transitions. ALIGN was previously tested in a long-term acute care hospital setting as part of a quality improvement project that demonstrated decreased hospital readmissions, increased use of hospice, improved self-reported patient care experience, and higher levels of advance directive completion. This pilot study will be conducted to determine the feasibility of applying ALIGN to the SNF rehab population. The current protocol will enroll 60 patients aged 65+ at the time of admission to receive the ALIGN intervention along with at least 60 caregivers. The Investigators will also enroll 120 patients and 60 caregivers to receive care as usual. The proposed specific aims (SA) and Hypotheses (H) are: SA1: To determine the feasibility of conducting a trial of ALIGN in older persons and their caregivers admitted to SNF rehab using a pragmatic, stepped-wedge design. H1: The ALIGN intervention will be feasible if a) eligibility, enrollment, refusal, retention and attrition rates are within 20% of expected; b) facility staff/providers and participants (patients and caregivers) find the intervention acceptable (semi-structured qualitative interviews) SA2: To conduct an exploratory analysis to estimate the effect size of ALIGN vs usual care on the primary patient-centered outcome, quality of life (FACT-G), and caregiver-centered outcome, caregiver burden (Zarit caregiver burden scale) and the secondary outcome (health care utilization). The investigators hypothesize that compared to control at 60-days post-enrollment, the ALIGN subjects will have: H2a: A clinically meaningful difference in the FACT-G (3-7 points on the overall scale) for patients. H2b: A clinically meaningful difference in the Zarit Caregiver burden scale (8±15) for caregivers. H2c: A 20% relative decrease in 60-day readmission to hospital. In addition to the key primary and secondary outcome measures listed above, the investigators will also explore the effect of ALIGN on utilization of palliative care/hospice, hospital length of stay, advance directive documentation, and care experience (Advanced Illness Coordinating Care Survey).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
220
Communication: The PCSW will follow this structured process to improve and facilitate communication for intervention patients. 1. Attend routine weekly facility-led rounds/meetings reviewing patients, their needs and attend discharge planning conference; 2. Visit with patient and caregiver after the discharge planning conference to ensure understanding of the plan of care; 3. Ensure all appropriate community programs (home health, community palliative care) have made contact and established care, assess the transition, and revisit domains from the initial assessment; 4. Suggest questions that need to be asked of community providers. Throughout the intervention, the PCSW will communicate updates from the visits to all involved providers. Visits will also focus on increasing goal alignment with the objective that all participants have a ROLT score that is most aligned. Visits will also explore goals of care; this includes completion or review of advance directives.
Kaiser Permanente Colorado-N/S/W
Denver, Colorado, United States
Feasibility
Number approached, enrolled, and retained in the collection of patient reported outcome measures
Time frame: 60 days
Change in Quality of Life
FACT-G
Time frame: Baseline and 60 days
Change in Caregiver Reaction Assessment
Caregiver burden and benefit finding
Time frame: Baseline and 60 days
Change in Zarit Caregiver Burden
burdens of caregiving
Time frame: Baseline and 60 days
Change in AICCES Survey
A survey of satisfaction with care for patients and caregivers
Time frame: Baseline and 60 days
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