Cognitive Impairment Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Care Model for Elderly Hip-fractured Persons With Cognitive Impairment and Their Family Caregivers
This study aims to develop and examine an innovative family-centered intervention model for managing cognitive decline, improving postoperative recovery of hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment, and enhancing family caregivers' competence in dementia care. This care model is theoretically underpinned by: (a) the Progressively Lowered Stress Threshold Model, a component of Lawton's ecological model of aging, and (b) the concept of partnership with family caregivers to strengthen their competence in providing care. Training are provided to family caregivers to enhance their competence in caring for hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment. The effectiveness of the care model has been evaluated in a randomized controlled trial. The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Chang Gung Memorial Hospital. A protocol of the family-centered care model was developed, and the research nurses were trained to provide the interventions. A checklist, consisting of postoperative care, rehabilitation exercises, nutritional health teaching, environmental modification suggestions, delirium care, and care issues for elders with cognitive impairment, as well as management of behavioral problems, was also developed and are recorded by the research nurses. This report is based on data collected from 149 dyads of participants who were recruited by September 2018 and randomly assigned to either an experimental group (n=73) or a control group (n=76). No significant differences are found between experimental and control group in their demographic and clinical variables including age, gender, diagnosis, surgery type, the length of hospital stay, the cognitive functioning, marital status, and educational level, as well as the age and gender of family caregivers. The refusal rate this year is 73.6%. The main reasons for caregivers not participating are not needed and too busy or afraid of being interrupted. No significant differences are found in demographic variables (ie, age, gender, diagnosis, surgery method, and length of hospital stay) between those who participated and those who refused. Causes of the attrition includes that participants refused to participate any more (n=25), died (n=12), moved to another location (n=6), and loss of contact (n=3). Older persons who quit participating in the study are more younger (p=.021) and more are diagnosed with inter-/sub-trochanteric fracture (p=.015) as well as more are receiving internal fixation (p=.029). Outcome variables including patients' cognitive function, clinical measures, self-care ability, family caregivers' competence and preparedness, health service utilization, quality of life, and cost of care. In addition to the clinical effectiveness of the family-centered care model will be evaluated by hierarchical linear models at the end of this study.
In this proposed clinical trial, the investigators intend to develop and examine an
innovative family-centered intervention care model for managing cognitive decline, improving
postoperative recovery of hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment, and enhancing
family caregiver's competence in dementia care. This study is innovative in two aspects:
first, its focus on older persons with comorbid conditions of cognitive impairment and hip
fracture, and second, the development of a family-centered care model for this population.
Therefore, the goal of this proposed study is to examine the cost and effects of a
family-centered care model that includes a family-centered interdisciplinary care component,
and a training/support component for family caregivers of hip-fractured patients with
cognitive impairment. The control group receives only usual care and the experimental group
receives usual care and family-centered care.
The specific aims are:
1. To develop a family-centered care model for hip-fractured elders with cognitive
impairment, consisting of family-centered geriatric assessment, continuous
rehabilitation, and supported discharge planning, and a family caregiver
training/support component to manage symptoms and behavioral problems associated with
cognitive decline and enhance postoperative recovery of hip-fractured patients with
cognitive impairment and to increase caregiver's competence in dementia care. The
protocol is pre-tested within the context of a randomized intervention study subject to
existing constraints of the clinical (i.e., CGMH) and community settings.
2. To evaluate the effectiveness of usual care and the family-centered care model for
hip-fractured elders with cognitive impairment in a randomized control trial. Effects of
the two care models will be evaluated by comparing the trajectories of selected outcome
variables: patients' clinical outcomes, self-care ability, cognitive function,
behavioral problems, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and service utilization,
and family caregivers' preparedness, competence, and HRQoL. Predictors of recovery
trajectories for the usual care and family-centered care models will also be compared.
3. If the effectiveness of the family-center care is established, the costs associated with
the usual care and family-centered care models will be analyzed. Cost items include: (1)
costs for personnel time and home care visits, (2) costs of hospitalization, (3) costs
of emergency or outpatient visits after hospital discharge due to a fall or re-fracture
in the same location, and due to diagnosis/treatment for post-operative cognitive
impairment, (4) patients' out-of-pocket costs for equipment such as walkers, crutches,
nutritional supplements, or other necessities to improve their health conditions or to
support walking, and (5) transportation expenses for patients and primary caregivers to
visit hospitals or costs of time away from work.
Hypotheses
Based on results from previous studies on the effects of the interdisciplinary care model
(Shyu et al., 2005, 2008) and of the family caregiver training program for patients with
dementia (Huang et al., 2013; Kuo et al., 2013), following hypotheses are proposed. During
the first year after hospital discharge, elderly hip-fractured patients with cognitive
impairment who receive the family-centered care model will:
1. Have less cognitive decline, better clinical outcomes, self-care ability, HRQoL, and
fewer behavioral problems than their counterparts who receive usual care.
2. Have more outpatient visits and fewer hospital readmissions and emergency room visits
than their counterparts who receive usual care.
3. Their family caregivers will have better preparedness and competence in dementia care as
well as HRQoL than caregivers of elderly hip-fractured patients with cognitive
impairment who receive usual care.
4. Have fewer re-admissions and emergency room visits at a lower total costs than the usual
care and their care givers will have lower productivity losses.
Background and Significance Dementia and hip fracture are both associated with substantial
disability and mortality, often coexist, are increasingly common in older adults, and have
shared risks (Friedman, Menzies, Bukata, Mendelson, & Kates, 2010). Cognitive impairment
occurs in 31-88% of older persons after surgery for hip fracture (Holmes & House, 2000a,
2000b). Cognitive impairment is not only a major risk factor for falling and hip fracture,
but also predicts postoperative complications, delirium, rehabilitation difficulties,
recurrence of fracture, nursing home placement (Jalbert, Eaton, Miller, & Lapane, 2010; Lee
et al., 2011; Yiannopoulou, Anastasiou, Ganetsos, Efthimiopoulos, & Papageorgiou, 2012), poor
functional recovery, increased risk of mortality (Dubljanin-Racpopoć, Matanović, &
Bumbasirević, 2010; Holmes & House, 2000b), and further cognitive impairment (Shyu et al.,
2013a).
Hip fracture in Taiwan, as in many other countries, has become a serious health issue (Liou,
Tsai, & Lin, 2002). Hip fractures are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality
worldwide, especially in developed countries among people >50 years old (Johnell & Kanis,
2006). The number of osteoporotic hip fractures in 2000 was estimated to be 1.6 million
worldwide (Johnell & Kanis, 2006), and this number was projected to increase by 2050 to 6.26
to 21 million (Parker & Johansen, 2006). By 2050 half of all hip fractures are estimated to
occur in Asia (Dhanwal, Dennison, Harvey, & Cooper, 2011). The age-adjusted incidence rates
(per 100, 000) for hip fracture in Taiwanese adults 50-100 years old from 1996 to 2000 were
225 in men and 505 in women, and these numbers were 10 to 20 times above the incidence rate
for the general population (Chie, Yang, Liu, & Tsai, 2004). Excess mortality was reported to
last 2 to 8 years after hip-fracture surgery (Johnston, Barnsdale, Smith, Duncan, &
Hutchison, 2010; Robbins, Biggs, & Cauley, 2006). After hip fracture, around half of older
persons who were independent before hip fracture become partly or completely dependent in
self-care ability (Shyu, Chen, Liang, Wu, & Su, 2004; Wildner et al., 2002). Hip fracture
represents a major and growing health care problem in Taiwan. Recovery from and management of
hip fracture may be significantly complicated by coexisting dementia.
Few studies have explored the effects of intervention programs on postoperative cognitive
impairment of older persons with a hip fracture. One study found that 37% of 256 elderly
hip-fractured patients were cognitively impaired on admission, and 51% of them reached normal
test scores during hospitalization (Strömberg, Lindgren, Nordin, Ohlén, & Svensson, 1997).
They also found that cognitive impairment was associated with more postsurgical
complications. A prior study (Shyu et al., 2013a) found that hip-fractured patients (N = 160)
who received interdisciplinary care were 75% less likely to be cognitively impaired 6 months
following discharge than those who received routine care (odds ratio = 0.25, P < 0.001).
However, it remains unclear whether older hip-fractured persons with dementia benefit from
similar rehabilitation and geriatric consultation as those without dementia. Some studies
found that patients with dementia, especially mild and moderate dementia, who suffered a hip
fracture benefited from multidisciplinary geriatric assessment and rehabilitation by
returning to the community (Huusko et al., 2000), improving functional recovery (Rolland et
al., 2004), decreasing postoperative complications, especially delirium and regaining prior
independence (Moncada et al., 2006; Stenvall et al., 2012). On the other hand, the
investigators found that cognitively impaired elderly patients (n = 51) benefited from
interdisciplinary care, consisting of geriatric consultation, continuous rehabilitation, and
supported discharge planning, by regaining their prior walking ability, but the intervention
did not prevent these elders' subsequent falls and decrease emergency room visits as it did
for those without cognitive impairment (n =109) (Shyu et al., 2102). In other words, the
interdisciplinary intervention effects were greater for those without cognitive impairment.
Another longitudinal study of 231 older persons with hip fracture found that cognitively
impaired patients did not retain rehabilitation gains in locomotion, transfers, self-care,
and sphincter control at 1 year following post-acute rehabilitation discharge (Young, Xiong,
& Pruzek, 2011). The authors suggested that these cognitively impaired patients would have
benefited from routine monitoring of cognitive status, a high level of continuity, and a
reorientation program.
In conclusion, of the few randomized controlled trials that have examined the effects of
intervention programs on hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment, most have analyzed
the effects on a sub-sample of patients with cognitive impairment. Intervention programs have
not yet been developed and tested specifically for hip-fractured patients with cognitive
impairment. In addition, most studies on hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment
examined the short-term outcomes of rehabilitation, and few explored intervention effects on
decreasing cognitive impairment and on recovery trajectories. To fill in these gaps in
knowledge, this proposed clinical trial will develop and test a family-centered care model
for hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment and their family caregivers to
facilitate postoperative recovery, decrease negative outcomes for patients, and support their
family caregivers.
The care model in this study will be delivered using a family-centered approach based on the
Progressively Lowered Stress Threshold Model (PLST) (Hall & Buckwalter, 1987) and the concept
of partnership with family caregivers (Harvath et al., 1994) to strengthen family caregivers'
competence in providing care to hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment. The PLST
model proposes that patients with dementia become anxious or agitated by external or
environmental demands and internal stimuli due to increasing disabilities resulting from
progressive cerebral pathology and associated cognitive decline. The affected person's
behavior becomes increasingly dysfunctional and often catastrophic when the stimuli continue
or increase. Thus, promoting dementia patients' adaptive behavior requires modifying and
reducing environmental demands and stress. In this study, the PLST model will be tailored to
the individual needs of hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment and their family
caregivers to enhance caregivers' preparedness and competence in dementia care.
At the same time, the concept of "partnership with family caregivers" emphasizes that
caregivers possesses important knowledge about the patient under their care of and the care
that patient receives (Harvath et al., 1994). The most useful and effective approach to
dealing with caregivers' problems and concerns is to combine the knowledge of caregivers and
nurses. Based on this notion, our family-centered care model focuses on nurse-caregiver
collaboration. This collaboration combines the caregiver's and nurse's knowledge to
facilitate in-home rehabilitation, identify the patient's behavioral problems and their
causes, and to plan the patient's individual care, thus decreasing behavioral problems and
improving postoperative cognitive function and recovery. The findings of this study can
increase knowledge in geriatric medicine about handling comorbidities in older persons,
especially those with cognitive impairment who are receiving treatment for other medical
conditions.
Basic Design The cost and clinical/intervention effectiveness of the family-centered care
model is evaluated using a randomized experimental design. The proposed project will take
place over a 5-year period at CGMH.
The investigators compare a usual care model and a family-centered interdisciplinary care
model, which consists of a family-centered approach to interdisciplinary care and a family
caregiving-training component to enhance family caregivers' competence in providing
post-operative care and handling behavioral problems and neuropsychiatric symptoms of adults
with cognitive impairment. In this study, the investigators improved the original
interdisciplinary care model, which included geriatric consultation, continuous
rehabilitation, and discharge planning, by adding a family-centered approach by involving
family caregivers in these main intervention components. For this trial, the investigators
propose comparing one experimental group (usual care plus family-centered care) to a control
group (usual care).
After a fall leading to hip fracture, patients are mostly sent directly to the hospital
emergency room, although some patients may visit outpatient clinics and enter the hospital
via the clinic. These patients are cared for by orthopedists and receive internal fixation or
arthroplasty. Consultations for internal medicine care are occasionally made depending on the
patient's condition. During the first 1-2 days after surgery, nurses teach patients how to
exercise while still in bed, using caution while changing their position. Pain-relief
medications and antibiotics are also administered (for 2-3 days). The first day after
surgery, physical therapy usually starts only for those who received arthroplasty of hip
replacement. In the first session, physical therapists train patients to use a walker and get
in/out of bed. Around 3-4 days after surgery, patients are usually discharged from the
hospital without home assessment. After hospital discharge, no in-home programs are provided
for rehabilitation or nursing care. Patients usually come back to the clinic around 1-2
weeks, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year after hospital discharge. However, adherence
to this follow-up schedule is poor. Telephone follow-ups are seldom used. The current routine
practice for elderly hip-fractured persons in Taiwan lacks well-organized interdisciplinary
care protocols, has no continuity of care, and does not provide specific care for
hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment.
Family-Centered Interdisciplinary Care The family-centered interdisciplinary care component.
The interdisciplinary care model was developed and examined in prior studies, but with
inconsistent findings (Shyu et al., 2008, 2010, 2013b). Prior analyses showed that the
difference between usual care and the original interdisciplinary care model has narrowed due
to improvements in usual care (Shyu et al., 2013b). At the same time, the effects of the
original interdisciplinary care model were poorer for patients with cognitive impairment than
without cognitive impairment (Shyu et al., 2012), and the model was not specifically designed
from a family-centered perspective. Therefore, this study modified the original
interdisciplinary care to involve family caregivers.
(A) Family-centered geriatric assessment. The geriatric consultation team has the tasks of
(1) providing comprehensive geriatric assessment and medical supervision to detect any
potential medical and functional problems, and (2) decreasing delays before surgery. In
addition to receiving usual care, patients are contacted within the first day of admission by
the geriatric nurse who completes the initial assessment and discusses it with the
geriatrician. Family caregiver will be invited to participate in the assessment and provide
information. This assessment collects information on medical and fall history, vital signs,
physical examination, physical and cognitive functions, nutritional status, preoperative
risks, current medications, and comorbidities. Based on this assessment/consultation,
suggestions will be made to the primary surgeon regarding time of surgery, utilization of
infection and thromboembolic prophylaxis, postoperative nutritional management, urinary tract
management, and delirium management/prevention. The primary surgeon, geriatric nurse, and
geriatrician will collaboratively develop a postoperative care plan.
In addition to receiving usual postoperative care, patients will be visited by the geriatric
nurse on the first day after surgery to assess for signs of delirium, pain, and postoperative
complications. If a patient presents any signs of delirium, cognitive impairment or any
psychiatric symptoms, a geriatric psychiatrist will be consulted. If the patient has signs of
other postoperative complications, the geriatrician will be consulted. Based on this
geriatric consultation, suggestions are made to the primary surgeon on using infection and
thromboembolic prophylaxis, postoperative nutritional management, urinary tract management,
pain management, and delirium management. The health care team reviews the postoperative care
plan to make any necessary changes.
In this study, the geriatric assessment will involve family caregivers. At the same time, the
family members will be informed of the care plan and sign an agreement form.
(B) Family-centered continuous rehabilitation. The rehabilitation program will include (1)
providing early postoperative rehabilitation to facilitate mobility, and (2) planning for
hospital discharge with rehabilitation in the patient's usual environment. Postoperative
rehabilitation starts on the first day after surgery and continues into the home setting
after hospital discharge. During hospitalization, the geriatric nurse visits the patient once
a day starting on the 1st day after surgery. For in-home rehabilitation, the geriatric nurse
will visit patients to provide in-home rehabilitation training once every week during the
first month, and once every 2 weeks for the second and third months following discharge. Both
in-patient and in-home rehabilitation programs contain a hip fracture-oriented intervention
and a general intervention for deteriorated physical fitness.
The hip fracture-oriented rehabilitation will focus on pain relief, range of motion, muscle
strength and endurance, proprioceptive enhancement, and balance challenges. The general
intervention to rehabilitate deteriorated physical fitness will emphasize exercises to
increase physical fitness. Physical fitness is defined as "the ability to perform muscular
work satisfactorily" (Shephard, 1978) and is assessed by five common parameters: aerobic
capacity, anaerobic capacity, muscle strength and endurance, flexibility, and body
composition (Skinner, Baldini, & Gardner, 1990). Therefore, as in our prior trial, the
in-home muscle-strength training program will progress according to the patient's recovery
condition in six stages: ankle pumping exercises, knee extension, gently bouncing jump with
knee semiflexed and both feet on the floor, gently bouncing jump with knee semiflexed and
single foot on the floor (Shyu et al., 2008, 2012), and ball-rolling activities (Shyu et al.,
2013b). The last exercise uses lower extremities to enhance proprioception. Fast walking will
be used at later stages to enhance aerobic capacity (Shyu et al., 2013b).
For the continuous rehabilitation program in this study, family caregivers will be taught the
rehabilitation protocols as they are responsible for giving or managing patient care.
Caregivers will be followed at each visit, progress of the rehabilitation will be monitored,
and family caregivers will be asked to keep a diary to help monitor patients' rehabilitation
adherence.
Family caregiver-training component. The family caregiver training will be a two-session
in-home training program developed in our prior studies (Huang et al., 2013; Kuo et al.,
2013) and delivered by trained registered research nurses. This training will be implemented
during the 3rd and 4th home visits (2 and 3 weeks after discharge, respectively) when the
discharge transition is more settled (Shyu, 2000). During the first caregiver training
session (3rd home visit), the research nurse will work with the family caregiver on a
structured guide to assess the condition of the hip-fractured patient with cognitive
impairment, including habits, daily routines, preferences, behavioral problems and
environmental safety and stimuli. The strengths, weakness, and resources of the family will
also be assessed. The research nurse will work with the family caregiver to identify
behavioral problems and symptoms to target. They will also use the PLST model to explore
environmental stimuli (antecedents) and consequences of the targeted behavioral problems.
They will then collaborate on a tentative plan to minimize these stimuli and decrease the
targeted behavioral problems by modifying the daily schedule and environment.
During the second caregiver training session (4th home visit), the research nurse will
confirm the behavioral problems and finalize the plan for handling specific behavioral
problems. Specific suggestions will be re-emphasized and modified as needed to lower
environmental stimuli of problem behaviors. The research nurse will also leave contact
information for family caregivers if any problems arise between visits regarding delivery of
the interventions.
Research nurses will make follow-up phone calls to family caregivers once a week for 2 weeks
to determine if behavioral problems and symptoms are handled, whether the previously made
suggestions are followed, and if there are any difficulties. Based on these discussions and
evaluations, research nurses will give further suggestions. In the meantime, family
caregivers in the control group will receive social contact follow-up phone calls at the same
time as caregivers in the experimental group.
The sample size was estimated based on our interest in longitudinal changes in outcome
variables. For sample estimation, the investigators used "Optimal Design" Software Version
3.01, free software with a graphical user interface to compute sample size for multi-level
and longitudinal research (Spybrook, et al., 2011). Since the proposed intervention has never
been conducted before, the investigators can only estimate the sample size based on prior
clinical trials of an interdisciplinary care model used with a subsample of hip-fractured
patients with cognitive impairment (Shyu et al., 2005, 2008) and a training program for
family caregivers of patients with dementia (Huang et al., 2013; Kuo et al., 2013). To
estimate patient outcome variables, outcome indicators of overall performance of ADLs and
IADLs, cognitive function, and physical component summary scores (SF-36) were selected
because they are the attributes most affected by hip fracture and most likely to change with
intervention (Shyu et al., 2005, 2008). To estimate family caregiver outcomes, outcome
indicators of preparedness, competence, and self-efficacy of managing behavioral problems
were selected because they were the direct outcomes affected by our previous individualized,
home-based family caregiver-training program (Huang et al., 2013). To estimate the sample
size for examining the effects of the family-centered care model in this study, the alpha was
set to 0.05 and sample size per group required for each indicator to achieve a power of 0.80.
The majority of estimated overall sample sizes for the proposed study ranged from 30 to 116.
Therefore, the study would require approximately at least 58 subjects for each group. Since
fewer than 20% to 30% of cases were lost in our previous studies (Huang et al., 2013; Kuo et
al., 2013), 76 patients in each group would be adequate for the proposed study. Based on our
recent studies, It is expected to recruit 5 to 6 hip-fractured patients with cognitive
impairment and at least 60 years old every month. Therefore, data collection will be
conducted for 26 to 31 months and will follow patient subjects for 1 year after hospital
discharge.
Procedure Subjects will be recruited by research assistants who will screen patient lists
from the emergency room and hospital admissions daily to avoid losing potential cases. For
patients who meet the study criteria, their primary physicians will be informed, and these
patients will be invited to participate in this study. Elderly patients and their family
caregivers who agree to participate will then be randomly assigned to the intervention group
or the control group by a neutral party. Patients and their family caregivers in the
experimental group will receive the family-centered care intervention, and those in the
control group will receive usual care. Patients and families will not be aware of their group
assignment and will be blinded to the care model they receive. Researchers who gather data
will be independent of those who will deliver the interventions.
Patients and caregivers in both groups will be assessed five times longitudinally. The first
assessment will be in the wards after surgery and before discharge. The second, third, fourth
and fifth, assessments will be made at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after discharge, respectively
(Shyu et al., 2008, 2013b). Family caregivers will keep weekly diaries to record
rehabilitation and cost information, which will be collected along with interview data. Diary
recording will be promoted by providing rewards such as giving small gifts and constant
feedback about patient's progress. Follow-up phone calls will be made for subjects who refuse
further home visit but agree to give information over telephone calls. Those agree to accept
telephone follow-ups will be telephoned to collect data on patients' self-care ability,
service utilization, mortality, and family caregiver's preparedness and competence.
Training Program for Interveners and Data Collectors Interveners and data collectors will be
trained based on our extensive experience from prior clinical trials. One registered nurse
will be trained to deliver family-centered care, including the family-centered rehabilitation
and discharge planning by the geriatric nurse specialist, Ching-Tzu Yang who is expected to
graduate from her PhD program this year and become the post-doctoral fellow of this study.
These nurses will also be trained by our co-PI, Dr. Huei-Ling Huang, who previously trained
caregivers of patients with dementia (Hung et al., 2013, Kuo et al., 2013), to develop
collaborative partnerships with family caregivers to identify environmental stimuli of and
manage behavioral problems/symptoms of patients with cognitive impairment. The protocols of
the care model will be outlined in a researcher-developed manual. The intervener nurses will
participate in at least five training sessions: at least one introductory session to explain
the study purpose, design, theoretical base, and procedures of the intervention program (2
hours), two sessions of simulated practice to become familiar with the manual (2 hours each),
and two home visits supervised by the geriatric nurse specialist. After the intervener nurses
achieve 100% consistency with the geriatric nurse specialist in care delivery, they can
proceed independently. To ensure the quality of the intervention program, nurse interveners
will attend regular team meetings with the surgeon, geriatrician, geriatric nurse, physical
therapist, rehabilitation physician, and psychiatrist to discuss related issues and will be
constantly supervised by the geriatric nurse specialist.
Another two registered nurses will collect data. These data collectors will have at least 3
years research experience and will receive two training sessions. In the first training
session (2 hours), the PI or Co-PIs will explain the study purpose, design, instruments, and
the geriatric nurse specialist will demonstrate a simulation interview with the family
caregiver and patients. In the second training session (2 hours), the data collectors will
practice collecting data from the patients and family caregivers under the supervision of the
geriatric specialist. Data collectors will attend monthly research team meetings. Problems
regarding data collection will be discussed and resolved on a regular, ongoing basis.
Data Analysis Analyses will be conducted under an intention-to-treat principle. Differences
in baseline characteristics, including pre-fracture self-care ability, between the
intervention group and control group will be assessed by one-way ANOVA or chi-square tests,
with the significance level set to 0.05.
For Hypothesis 1, hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment who receive the
family-centered care model will have better clinical outcomes, self-care ability, cognitive
function, HRQoL, and fewer behavioral problems than those who receive usual care. For
Hypothesis 2, intervention participants will have more outpatient visits and fewer hospital
readmissions and emergency room visits than those who receive usual care. Hypothesis 3,
intervention participants' family caregivers will have better preparedness, competence, and
HRQoL than those receiving usual care.
Changes in outcome variables (patients' cognitive function [MMSE, PRMQ, DRS-R-98], clinical
outcomes, self-care ability, HRQoL [SF-36], and behavioral problems [CMAI], and family
caregivers' preparedness, competence, and HRQoL) will be analyzed using hierarchical linear
models (Raudenbush & Bryk, 2002). A series of multilevel linear models will be estimated
using usual care (control group) as the reference category.
For binary outcome variables (dementia risk, delirium, subsequent falls, emergency room
visit, hospital readmission, mortality, and complete independence in ADL [CBI = 100] and in
CBI walking ability [walking ability item = 15]), a series of multilevel multinomial logit
models will be estimated using usual care as the reference category. Doing so will allow us
to estimate the odds for patient participants receiving family-centered care of being at risk
for dementia or delirium, of using health services, of being completely independent in ADL
and walking ability relative to the odds for the usual care group over time. When the
investigators evaluate the non-linear function of changes with time, centering time will be
at 3 and 6 months after discharge to minimize the possibility of multicollinearity because
the most rapid improvement in recovery occurs during the first 6 months (Shyu et al., 2013b;
Shyu, Chen, Liang, Wu et al., 2004). Finally, attrition will be accounted for with each dummy
outcome variable, one identifying subjects who die during the 1-year follow-up period, and
the other identifying those who drop out for other reasons.
Hypothesis 4, those received family-centered care will have fewer re-admissions and emergency
room visits at a lower total costs than the usual care and their care givers will have lower
productivity losses.
For the cost analysis, an "incremental cost-effectiveness ratio" will be calculated to
demonstrate the additional costs for each elderly hip-fractured patient with better cognitive
function outcomes and for clinical outcomes related to hip fracture within the 12-month
period after hospital discharge. This ratio will then be used to determine whether the
family-centered care model represents a more cost-effective care model for elderly
hip-fractured patients. Additionally, a multi-way sensitivity analysis will be employed to
test the robustness of the study results.
The study will be completed and all hypotheses will be tested. Moreover, the results will
provide a reference for planning future care models for elderly hip-fractured persons with
other comorbidities.
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