COVID-19 pandemic has developed worldwide in less than 4 months. The clinical presentations are variable widely, ranging from simple rhinitis to major lung damage that can lead to death. In many countries involved in the ongoing health disaster due to SARS-CoV-2 infection, hospital are overloaded. In this context, the decision to hospitalize or to manage COVID-19 patients at home is crucial and defining reliable and consensual criteria is a major issue. HOME-CoV study is a multicentre quasi-experimental interventional study, before and after implementation of a help-decision making rule (HOME-CoV rule), developed via the Delphi method. Our main hypothesis is that a strategy based on the consensual HOME-CoV rule compared to current practice is at least as safe as regards the 7-day-rate of adverse events (safety criterion) and more effective as regards the rate of patients eventually managed as outpatients (efficacy criterion).
Definition of HOME-CoV rule: The Delphi method is used to reach a consensus of a large panel of experts and to define an easy-to-use clinical rule aiming to help emergency physicians in hospitalisation or outpatient management decision making : the HOME-CoV rule. The impact of the rule implementation is evaluated in a before and after study: * before period: observational assessment of current practices * implementation period : educational lectures, posters, and pocket cards showing and explaining HOME-CoV rule are communicated to participating Emergency Departments. * after period : observational assessment of practices In each period, patients consulting Emergency Departments with suspected or probable COVID-19 are evaluated for potential inclusion. Clinical, biological and imaging data that may be involved in decision-making about hospitalization are collected as well as the physician final decision (hospitalization or outpatient management) and its main determinants. A phone-call follow-up is performed and the clinical status according to the Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement of COVID-19 from the World Heath Organization is collected on day 7 and day 28 following inclusion.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
3,133
HOME-CoV rule is an easy-to-use clinical rule aiming to help emergency physicians in hospitalisation or outpatient management decision making. The definition of the rule is performed using the Delphi method to reach a consensus of a large panel of experts. Between before and after period, educational lectures, posters, and pocket cards showing and explaining HOME-CoV rule are communicated to participating Emergency Departments.
Clinique Universitaire Saint-Luc
Brussels, Belgium
CHU de Liège
Liège, Belgium
Ch Argenteuil
Argenteuil, France
CH Cholet
Cholet, France
CHU Clermont Ferrand
Clermont-Ferrand, France
Ch Colmar
Colmar, France
CH Alpes Lemant
Contamine-sur-Arve, France
CHU Dijon
Dijon, France
CH Le Mans
Le Mans, France
CH Libourne
Libourne, France
...and 19 more locations
the composite rate of adverse outcomes
Adverse outcomes include intubation with mechanical ventilation requirement and death (Stage ≥ 6 on "Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement" of the World Health Organization) within 7 days after inclusion.
Time frame: day 7
The rate of hospitalization
The rate of patients hospitalized after admission to the emergency room including patients discharged home more than 24 hours after admission. It will be analyzed in a hierarchical approach, only if first primary objective is positive i.e. non-inferiority of HOME-CoV strategy versus current practice on the rate of adverse outcomes.
Time frame: 24 hours
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