This study examines the implications of providing hospital-level care in rural homes.
Home hospital care is hospital-level care at home for acutely ill patients. In multiple publications mostly in urban environments, home hospital care delivered cost-effective, high-quality, excellent experience care with similar quality and safety as traditional hospital care. Most home hospital models deliver care in urban environments, not in rural environments. To further improve the model, the investigators propose to determine the feasibility of home hospital care in a rural home setting through a proof-of-concept approach.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
7
Patients receive hospital-level care in their home.
University of Utah Health
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Number of Patients That Completed Their Rural Home Hospitalization
Rural home hospital is when eligible rural patients receive hospital level care at home. This measure includes patients that were hospitalized in rural home hospital for treatment for their acute condition and were discharged from rural home hospital after their treatment was complete. The number in the data table reflects the number of patients that completed their home hospitalization.
Time frame: Day of admission to day of discharge, estimated 10 days later
3-item Care Transition Measure
This is a hospital level measure of performance that reports the average patient reported quality of preparation for self-care response among adult patients discharged from general acute care hospitals. Data will be collected by a Research Assistant via patient, ( scale of 1 to 12; where 12 indicates highest readiness to transition). The final score is calculated by calculating the sum or responses across the three items ((score Strongly Disagree = 1; Disagree = 2; Agree = 3; Strongly Agree = 4), the number of questions answers are counted, and then the mean response is then calculated (sum divided by count).
Time frame: Once, within Day of discharge to 7 days later
Picker Experience Questionnaire
The Picker Patient Experience Questionnaire is a fifteen item questionnaire covering eight domains including information \& education and coordination of care. The questionnaire is used to measure patient experience with in-patient care. The questions have two ("yes" or "no") to four response options ("yes"," no", "I did not need to", or "yes, to some extent"). Neutral answers, such as "I did not need to", and the most positive answer are coded as a "non-problem" (score = 0). The remaining responses are coded as "problems" (score = 1). A problem is defined as any aspect of health care that could be improved upon. Data will be collected by a research assistant via patient. Scale of 1-15, where a higher score indicates better patient experience.
Time frame: Once, within Day of discharge to 7 days later
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Global Satisfaction: Scale
Measure of patient experience and satisfaction with care using any number from 0 to 10, where 0 is the worst hospital possible and 10 is the best hospital possible. Data will be collected by a Research Assistant via patient
Time frame: Once, between Day of discharge to 7 days later
Perceived Acceptability of RHH Care
Perceived acceptability will be assessed qualitatively through post-discharge semi-structured interviews with clinicians, patients, and caregivers.The numbers in the data table reflect the number of patients and clinicians that perceived rural home hospital care to be acceptable.
Time frame: Day of discharge to 30 days later
Perceived Safety, Quality of Care, Caregiver Burden
Perceived safety, quality of care, caregiver burden will be assessed qualitatively through one post-discharge semi-structured interview with each participating clinician, patient, and caregiver. The numbers in the data table reflect the number of patients and clinicians that perceived that rural home hospital was safe and that the care provided was of high quality.
Time frame: Day of discharge to 30 days later
Number of Rural Home Hospital Patients Escalated to Hospital for Care
If enrolled patient must be discharged from rural home hospital and taken to an acute-care hospital for care. Data to be collected daily by a research assistant via the Registered Nurse or Paramedic
Time frame: Day of admission to day of discharge, estimated 10 days later
Number of Patients With an Adverse Event
Adverse events include Fall, Delirium, Potentially preventable Venous Thromboembolism (VTE), New pressure ulcer, Thrombophlebitis at peripheral intravenous line (IV) site. Data to be collected daily by a research assistant via the Registered Nurse or Paramedic
Time frame: Day of admission to day of discharge, estimated 10 days later
Number of Patients With Unplanned Mortality During Admission
Any case of unplanned death among enrolled rural home hospital patient.Data to be collected daily by a research assistant via the Registered Nurse or Paramedic
Time frame: Day of admission to day of discharge, estimated 10 days later
Lab Orders, Number
Number of clinical lab orders. Data to be collected daily by a research assistant via rural home hospital records
Time frame: Day of admission to day of discharge, estimated 10 days later
Length of Stay
The number of days enrolled patient is admitted to rural home hospital.Data to be collected daily by a research assistant via rural home hospital records.
Time frame: Day of admission to day of discharge, estimated 10 days later
Unplanned Readmission(s), Number or Patients
Unplanned readmission of patient to hospital 30 days post discharge from rural home hospital. Data to be collected by a research assistant via the patient.
Time frame: 30-days post-discharge
ED Visit(s), Number
Any Emergency Department (ED) visits 30 days post-discharge from rural home hospital. Data to be collected by a research assistant via the patient
Time frame: 30-days post-discharge