Overall objective is to test whether the 5-weekly family home palliative and end-of-life care (FamPALcare) intervention educational and supportive sessions will improve rural home end-of-life and palliative care (EOLPC) for advanced heart failure at 6 months follow up.
Heart failure (HF) afflicts 6.5 million Americans with devastating consequences to patients and their family caregivers especially during severe symptoms in the long-lasting end stage. Advanced HF was defined by American Heart Association (AHA) as "the presence of progressive and/or persistent severe signs and symptoms of HF despite optimized medical, surgical, and device therapy." When patients and family members are not prepared for worsening HF and are not informed about end-of-life and palliative care (EOLPC) conservative comfort options, they experience depression, fear of painful death, home care burden, and medical expenses from anxiously seeking aggressive but futile care. Notably, West Virginia (WV) has the highest HF death in the U.S. at 32.6 per 100,000 population, where 14% of those over 65 years have HF. WV is in the large Appalachian region, which stretches across eastern North America with 25.6 million people and contains a vast number of disadvantaged rural communities. National Institutes of Health has designated Appalachia as a high priority for research as residents experience extreme health and poverty inequities and limited access to healthcare. Furthermore, home EOLPC is lacking across this disadvantaged rural area. Thus, there is a need to investigate the new family intervention (FamPALcare), where nurses coach family-managed advanced HF care at home in Appalachia. This study addresses the National Institutes of Health Academic Research Enhancement Award (AREA) priorities for conducting a low risk clinical trials to provide a foundation to advance scientific EOLPC knowledge and testing of our intervention efficacy in larger clinical trials. Additionally, effective EOLPC interventions are priorities of palliative care professionals and palliative care needs must be addressed with vulnerable and advanced HF patients and their families. This study also addresses the priority problem of the lack information for families providing advanced HF home care and preventing unwanted and unwarranted rehospitalizations at the advanced stage of HF. This study uses a randomized controlled trial (RCT) design stratified by gender (male vs female) to determine any differences in the FamPALcare HF patients and their family caregiver outcomes versus standard care control group outcomes (N=72). Specific aims are to: (1) Test the FamPALcare nursing care intervention with patients and family members managing home supportive EOLPC for advanced HF in rural WV using a small randomized controlled trial (RCT) and (2) Assess implementation of the FamPALcare intervention and research procedures for subsequent clinical trials. The control patients receive standard care given through the West Virginia University hospital and outpatient clinics, prescribed by the patient's cardiologist. The FamPALcare intervention group will receive standard care, plus 5-weekly FamPALcare intervention delivered by community-based nurses. FamPALcare intervention involves coaching patients and family caregivers in advanced HF home care and supporting EOLPC discussions. Data will be collected from all patients and caregivers independently at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
78
Intervention participants will receive standard care plus five weekly coaching sessions with telephone follow-up to reinforce HF palliative home care.
West Virginia University Hospital
Morgantown, West Virginia, United States
Patient Heart Failure Health Status (KCCQ)- Baseline
The patients Heart Failure Health Status was measured by administering the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ). KCCQ is a 12-item Likert scale (range 0-4). Total scores are calculated in a range of 0-100, with the higher score indicating better Heart Failure Health Status.
Time frame: Baseline
Patient Heart Failure Health Status (KCCQ) -3 Month
The patients Heart Failure Health Status was measured by administering the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ). KCCQ is a 12-item Likert scale (range 0-4). Total scores are calculated in a range of 0-100, with the higher score indicating better Heart Failure Health Status.
Time frame: 3 Month
Patient Heart Failure Health Status (KCCQ)- 6 Month
The patients Heart Failure Health Status was measured by administering the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ). KCCQ is a 12-item Likert scale (range 0-4). Total scores are calculated in a range of 0-100, with the higher score indicating better Heart Failure Health Status.
Time frame: 6 Month
Patient Mental Health - Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4)- Baseline
Patient-reported mental health measured by Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4) of 4 questions. Each question is scored on a scale from 0 to 3, based on how often the respondent has been bothered by the problem 0 is not at all and 3 is nearly every day. The total score ranges from 0 to 12. The higher the score indicates a worse mental health status.
Time frame: Baseline
Patient Mental Health - Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ4)- 3 Month
Patient-reported mental health measured by Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4) of 4 questions. Each question is scored on a scale from 0 to 3, based on how often the respondent has been bothered by the problem 0 is not at all and 3 is nearly every day. The total score ranges from 0 to 12. The higher the score indicates a worse mental health status.
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Time frame: 3 Month
Patient Mental Health - Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4)- 6 Month
Patient-reported mental health measured by Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4) of 4 questions. Each question is scored on a scale from 0 to 3, based on how often the respondent has been bothered by the problem 0 is not at all and 3 is nearly every day. The total score ranges from 0 to 12. The higher the score indicates a worse mental health status.
Time frame: 6 Month
Caregiver Mental Health - Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4)- Baseline
Caregiver mental health measured by Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4) of 4 questions. Each question is scored on a scale from 0 to 3, based on how often the respondent has been bothered by the problem 0 is not at all and 3 is nearly every day. The total score ranges from 0 to 12. The higher the score indicates a worse mental health status.
Time frame: Baseline
Caregiver Mental Health - Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4)- 3 Month
Caregiver mental health measured by Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4) of 4 questions. Each question is scored on a scale from 0 to 3, based on how often the respondent has been bothered by the problem 0 is not at all and 3 is nearly every day. The total score ranges from 0 to 12. The higher the score indicates a worse mental health status.
Time frame: 3 Month
Caregiver Mental Health - Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4)- 6 Month
Caregiver mental health measured by Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4) of 4 questions. Each question is scored on a scale from 0 to 3, based on how often the respondent has been bothered by the problem 0 is not at all and 3 is nearly every day. The total score ranges from 0 to 12. The higher the score indicates a worse mental health status.
Time frame: 6 Month
Caregiver Quality of Life - SF12V2 Health Survey- Baseline (MCS-12)
The SF-12v2 Health Survey is a multipurpose short-form questionnaire with only 12 questions with two summary scores, the SF-12 Physical Component Summary (PCS-12) and the SF-12 Mental Component Summary (MCS-12). The scoring range for the PCS-12 and MCS-12 is 0 to 100, with a lower score indicating a poorer level of Caregiver quality of life.
Time frame: Baseline
Caregiver Quality of Life - SF12v2 Health Survey- 3 Month (MCS-12)
The SF-12v2 Health Survey is a multipurpose short-form questionnaire with only 12 questions with two summary scores, the SF-12 Physical Component Summary (PCS-12) and the SF-12 Mental Component Summary (MCS-12). The scoring range for the PCS-12 and MCS-12 is 0 to 100, with a lower score indicating a poorer level of Caregiver quality of life.
Time frame: 3 Month
Caregiver Quality of Life - SF12v2 Health Survey- 6 Month (MCS-12)
The SF-12v2 Health Survey is a multipurpose short-form questionnaire with only 12 questions with two summary scores, the SF-12 Physical Component Summary (PCS-12) and the SF-12 Mental Component Summary (MCS-12). The scoring range for both the PCS-12 and MCS-12 is 0 to 100, with a lower score indicating a poorer level of Caregiver quality of life.
Time frame: 6 Months
Caregiver Quality of Life - SF12V2 Health Survey- Baseline (PCS-12)
The SF-12v2 Health Survey is a multipurpose short-form questionnaire with only 12 questions with two summary scores, the SF-12 Physical Component Summary (PCS-12) and the SF-12 Mental Component Summary (MCS-12). The scoring range for the PCS-12 and MCS-12 is 0 to 100, with a lower score indicating a poorer level of Caregiver quality of life.
Time frame: Baseline
Caregiver Quality of Life - SF12v2 Health Survey- 3 Month (PCS-12)
The SF-12v2 Health Survey is a multipurpose short-form questionnaire with only 12 questions with two summary scores, the SF-12 Physical Component Summary (PCS-12) and the SF-12 Mental Component Summary (MCS-12). The scoring range for the PCS-12 and MCS-12 is 0 to 100, with a lower score indicating a poorer level of Caregiver quality of life.
Time frame: 3 Month
Caregiver Quality of Life - SF12v2 Health Survey- 6 Month (PCS-12)
The SF-12v2 Health Survey is a multipurpose short-form questionnaire with only 12 questions with two summary scores, the SF-12 Physical Component Summary (PCS-12) and the SF-12 Mental Component Summary (MCS-12). The scoring range for the PCS-12 and MCS-12 is 0 to 100, with a lower score indicating a poorer level of Caregiver quality of life.
Time frame: 6 Months
Caregiver Burden (ZBI-12)- Baseline
The Zarit Burden Interview-12 (ZBI-12) consists of 12 items that measure the emotional, physical, and social impact of caregiving. There are 12 questions and each question is rated on a 5-point scale from 0 (never) to 4 (nearly always). The total score ranges from 0 to 48, with higher scores indicating greater caregiver burden.
Time frame: Baseline
Caregiver Burden (ZBI-12)- 3 Month
The Zarit Burden Interview-12 (ZBI-12) consists of 12 items that measure the emotional, physical, and social impact of caregiving. There are 12 questions and each question is rated on a 5-point scale from 0 (never) to 4 (nearly always). The total score ranges from 0 to 48, with higher scores indicating greater caregiver burden.
Time frame: 3 Month
Caregiver Burden (ZBI-12)- 6 Month
The Zarit Burden Interview-12 (ZBI-12) consists of 12 items that measure the emotional, physical, and social impact of caregiving. There are 12 questions and each question is rated on a 5-point scale from 0 (never) to 4 (nearly always). The total score ranges from 0 to 48, with higher scores indicating greater caregiver burden.
Time frame: 6 Month
FamPALcare Helpfulness Scale
This scale was completed voluntarily by participants that received the intervention (ARM Title: FamPALcare. The FamPALcare helpfulness scale is an 11-item Likert-type scale used to measure the perceived helpfulness of the FamPALcare intervention. Participants rate each item on a scale from 1 (not helpful) to 5 (very helpful). This scale is used to assess the effectiveness of the intervention in improving outcomes for patients with heart failure and their caregivers.
Time frame: 6 months