Aims To assess the effect of the implementation of the Community Nurse Case Manager (CNCM) in the care of complex and pluripathological chronic patients (CPCP) with dependence, from Primary Care, on functional capacity, cognitive performance, quality of life, consumption of health resources, clinical parameters, overload of the main caregiver, and satisfaction of the user and/or caregiver. Design Pre- and post-intervention quasi-experimental study in CPCP. Methods 212 subjects will be recruited from two urban health centers in Salamanca (Spain) with complex and chronic pluripathology (CCP) associated to cardiac, respiratory pathology and/or diabetes mellitus, who are dependent and have a planned hospital discharge. An initial evaluation will be performed after hospital discharge in both groups, including: anamnesis (prescribed drugs and symptoms attributable to the underlying pathology), physical examination (blood pressure, heart rate and oxygen saturation), determination of capillary HbA1c, and assessment of functional capacity (Barthel), cognitive performance (MoCA), quality of life (COOP-WONCA), therapeutic adherence and overload of the main caregiver (Zarit). There will be another evaluation at 3,6 and 12 months, when these same variables will be collected, in addition to the number of readmissions in each period and the satisfaction of the user and/or caregiver (Satisfad 14). The nurse from the Primary Care team will provide both groups with the usual care contemplated for this type of patient in the Portfolio of Services of the Health Service of Castilla y León. Additionally, in the experimental group there will be telephone follow-up and the caregiver will be trained on the signs of decompensation and the care required. Conclusion The deployment of the NCM (Nurse Care Manager) in Primary Care will provide comprehensive and individualized care to the CPCP and the main caregiver with proactive monitoring. In addition, it will reinforce the involvement of the caregiver and the patient to improve their self-care and will detect early signs and symptoms of decompensation to avoid hospital readmissions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
212
Their action protocol has been designed and sequenced according to the circumstances in which the Complex and Pluripathological Chronic Patient finds themself: * Pre-hospital discharge. The hospital Nurse Case Manager (HNCM) will contact the CNCM to inform of the imminent hospital discharge. * Hospital discharge: A comprehensive nursing assessment of the CPCP based on Marjory Gordon's functional patterns will be carried out. * Planned visits: An infographic will be provided to identify signs and symptoms of decompensation/exacerbation and a direct dial telephone number. * Proactive telephone follow-up: The CNCM will make comfort calls every week for the first month, every 15 days until the 3-months visit and every month until the 6- and 12-months visits. * Exacerbations/decompensations: An appointment will be arranged with their Primary Care physician. * Hospital readmission: The CNCM will be kept informed of the process through the HNCM and CPCP's digital clinical history.
Activities of daily living
Evaluated by Barthel index. Score (0-100). A person is considered totally dependent if it is ˂20 points; severely dependent if it is between 25-60 points; moderately dependent if it is between 65-90 points; and mildly dependent if it is equal to 95 points
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Cognitive performance
Evaluated by Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). Score (0-30). A score of 26 or higher is considered normal
Time frame: 0,3,6,12 months
Health-related quality of life
Evaluated by Health-related quality of life (COOP-WONCA test). This consists of a drawing representing a level of functioning on seven areas with a 5-level Likert scale. Higher scores express worse levels of functioning/well-being.
Time frame: 0,3,6,12 months
Frailty
Evaluated by FRAIL questionnaire. This consists of 5 simple questions on fatigue, endurance, ambulation, comorbidity and weight loss. Persons scoring 1 point or more are considered frail
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Primary caregiver overload
Evaluated by the Zarit scale. Score (22 - 110). A score ≥47 points being considered overburden
Time frame: 0,3,6,12 months
Therapeutic adherence
Evaluated by a scale to assess the patient's skills and knowledge of the prescribed treatment, adapted from the DRUGS and Med-Take scales. A score \> 75%, the patient is adherence to treatment.
Time frame: 1,3,6,12 months
User satisfaction
Evaluated by Satisfad Questionnaire 14. Score (0-42). Each item is assessed through a 4-level Likert scale. A higher score means a higher level of satisfaction
Time frame: 1,3,6,12 months
Degree of dyspnoea
Evaluated by modified Medical Research Council Scale. This consists of 5 levels. The higher the level, the lower the tolerance to activity due to dyspnoea
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Symptoms attributable to heart disease
Evaluated by the New York Heart Association Functional Classification. This consists of 4 Class. Class I patients have no symptoms, while those in classes II, III and IV have mild, moderate and severe symptoms, respectively
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Number of hospital admissions
Collected from the patient's medical history
Time frame: 1,3,6,12 months
Number of drugs chronically prescribed
Collected from the patient's medical history
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Weight
Collected from the patient's medical history
Time frame: 0 months
Height
Collected from the patient's medical history
Time frame: 0 months
Body mass index
Collected from the patient's medical history
Time frame: 0 months
Blood pressure systolic and diastolic
Measured in mmHg
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Oxygen saturation
Measured in %
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Heart rate
Measured in bpm
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Capillary blood glucose
Measured in mg/dl
Time frame: 0,1,3,6,12 months
Capillary glycosylated haemoglobin
Measured in %
Time frame: 0,3,6,12 months
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