The project focuses on supporting home care in the post-hospitalization period (Home Health Phase), and then further optimizing the older Veterans' recovery of mobility and physical activity in the transition back to the home/community (Follow-up Phase).
Medicare-funded home care bridges gaps in the transition of patients from hospital to home; yet, it is a bridge with gaps of its own, having limited communication with both the discharging hospital physician and the receiving primary care provider and having limited knowledge of the longitudinal medical history of the patient. Once home care is completed, there is often no plan of continued support to transition the older Veteran back to optimal home/community function. In the Home Health Phase, a VA-home care Link Team (physician, clinical pharmacist, social worker, and physical activity trainer) will provide immediate communication/coordination between the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System (VAAAHS) and home care agencies contracted by VAAAHS. The intervention is based on a conceptual model of home care as a bridge between hospital and home, in which three interconnected domains determine short-term and long-term outcomes: medical complexity (e.g., medication management), social complexity (e.g., caregiving, environment), and functional impairment (e.g., mobility, physical activity). The VA Link Team will provide support and assessment for each domain. The team will use telemedicine technology and wearable sensors in the home to gather patient data and facilitate communication between the patient, health care providers, and the Link Team. The Follow-up Phase begins at the end of formal home care services, when the Link Team will provide patient-centered care in two ways: 1) support for the the Veteran and caregiver in the event of changes in medical condition or medications as well as social or caregiver stressors; and 2) coaching to the Veteran and the caregiver during this transition period to optimize functional mobility and physical activity.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
100
A VA home care Link Team (clinical pharmacist, social worker, physical activity trainer) provides the intervention based on a conceptual model of home care as a bridge between hospital and home, in which three interconnected domains determine short-term and long-term outcomes: medical complexity (e.g., medication management), social complexity (e.g., caregiving, environment), and functional impairment (e.g., mobility, physical activity). The Link Team provides support and assessment for each domain, and will use tablet technology and wearable sensors in the home to gather patient data and facilitate communication. At the end of formal home care services, the Link Team provides patient-centered care in: 1) support for the the Veteran and caregiver in the event of changes in medical condition or medications and social or caregiver stressors; and 2) coaching to the Veteran and the caregiver during this transition period to optimize functional mobility and physical activity.
VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
RECRUITINGTelemedicine Encounters
Number of successful telemedicine encounters is measured for each participant.
Time frame: 1 year
Successful Telemedicine Encounter Rate
Percentage of successful telemedicine encounters is measured for each participant.
Time frame: 1 year
Remote Short Portable Performance Battery (rSPPB)
The rSPPB, based on the widely used SPPB measures of walking speed, multiple chair stands, and standing balance, will be performed with caregiver standby assist while the Veteran is viewed via the tablet camera.
Time frame: (1) Baseline; (2) Up to 6 months; (3) Up to 1 year.
Wearable sensors
Physical activity will be measured over a seven day period with a research grade sensor, the activPAL3VT.
Time frame: (1) Baseline; (2) Up to 6 months; (3) Up to 1 year.
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.