Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Impact of a Patient-Centered Discharge Summary (PODS) on Patient Experience and Health Outcomes Following Discharge: A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial
Improving the patient experience has become a major focus of quality improvement efforts in Ontario and in health systems worldwide. However, our existing knowledge base is relatively under-developed, particularly in how patients experience care as they transition from one care setting to another and the relationship between patient experience and clinical outcomes. The Patient Oriented Discharge Summary (PODS) is a discharge instruction tool created by patients, caregivers, health-care providers and design experts. It provides a written template for providers to engage patients and caregivers when reviewing important instructions on medications, activity and diet restrictions, follow-up appointments and worrisome symptoms warranting emergency care following admission to hospital. The PODS also uses plain and simple wording, large fonts, pictograms, and includes white space for patients to take notes and provides the option for translation of major headings into the most common spoken languages. The PODS impact study will study the impact of using the PODS versus usual discharge instructions on patient experience and health outcomes in a provincial-wide randomized study across acute care and rehabilitation hospitals.
Full Title: The impact of a patient-centered discharge summary (PODS) on patient experience
and health outcomes following discharge: A multicenter randomized controlled trial.
Short Title: PODS Impact Study
Primary Objective: To evaluate the impact of a patient-centered discharge instruction tool on
patient experience following hospital discharge.
Primary Outcome Measure: Patient experience within 72 hours following discharge from
hospital. Count of negative responses (i.e., "No", or "Not at all" or "Partly") to 6
prespecified questions on patient experience of transition of care answered 72 hours
following discharge from hospital, with the first 5 questions from the CIHI Patient
Experiences Survey - In-Patient Care (CPES-IC). Groups will be compared using a rate ratio
(ratio of negative binomial rates).
Secondary Objectives: 1) Evaluate the impact of a patient-centered discharge instruction tool
on health outcomes following hospital discharge. 2) Identify the level of patient and system
engagement needed when providing discharge instructions and patient-specific characteristics
that might impact the use and effectiveness of discharge instructions.
Secondary Outcome Measures: Self-reported adherence to medications, diet and activity
restrictions, and scheduled visits with primary care physician and/or specialist at 30 days
following discharge, and a composite of unscheduled visits to primary care physician,
emergency room, readmission to hospital or death at 30 days and 3 months following discharge.
Proportion of patients who responded "Yes", or "Quite a Bit" or "Completely", to 4 out of the
6 prespecified questions on patient experience of transitions of care, 72 hours following
discharge from hospital as a measure of patient experience of their transition of care
(original primary outcome, re-specified as secondary outcome based on DMC recommendation).
Study Design: The study will use a mixed methods approach with a randomized controlled trial
(RCT) and qualitative study.
Inclusion Criteria: All patients (>=18 years) admitted to inpatient units at University
Health Network (UHN) (and other participating hospitals in Ontario) with a primary diagnosis
of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pneumonia, stroke, congestive heart failure, post
hip and knee replacement will be recruited for randomization to receive the PODS versus
standard of discharge care. These diseases were chosen to align with the Ministry of Health
and Long Term Care (MOHLTC) quality based procedures.
Exclusion Criteria: Patients who are being discharged to another facility rather than home,
who have a prognosis of less than 3 months, who do not have a telephone for post-discharge
follow-up or with cognitive impairment or significant language barrier for whom a family
member or professional interpreter is not available will be excluded from the study.
Intervention: The patient-oriented discharge summary (PODS) is a discharge instruction tool
co-created with patients which provides a written template for providers to engage patients
and caregivers when reviewing discharge instructions on medications, activity and diet
restrictions, follow-up appointments or outstanding investigations and worrisome symptoms
warranting emergency care (Appendix A). The PODS also uses plain and simple wording, large
fonts, pictograms, and includes white space for patients to take notes and provides the
option for translation of major headings into the most common spoken languages. As this will
be a pragmatic design, we may make modifications to the process involved in completing the
PODS, such as using pre-filled disease-specific information, if system processes and
providers involved deem it more usable and feasible.
Sample Size: We estimate that we will require at minimum 199 and at maximum 388 patients in
each study arm if we want to detect a 10% minimum improvement in patient experience scores.
Currently, we have study centers that would like to participate in Toronto, Ottawa and
Thunder Bay.
Accrual Period: Enrollment for this study will begin once ethics approval is obtained and
continue until 776 patients have been enrolled (in total across all participating sites).
Study Duration: The study is expected to run between December 1, 2015 and March 31, 2018
(approximately 3 years) following research ethics board (REB) approval. This will allow for a
year of study enrollment across participating sites until sample size is achieved as well as
3 months of follow-up for primary and secondary endpoints and a year for data analysis and
manuscript preparation.
Data Monitoring Committee (DMC): A DMC was established on May 4, 2018, due to challenges in
recruitment and widespread implementation of the intervention across multiple hospitals in
Ontario resulting in a change in the standard of discharge care in the trial's setting. In
view of the challenges in recruiting future patients, resource constraints, and statistical
considerations, the DMC recommended that recruitment be stopped prematurely and that the
analytical approach for the primary outcome be changed, analyzing the data as count data
rather than dichotomized data. Study recruitment was stopped at the end of August 2018, after
a total of 526 participants had been randomized, with final follow up of participants in
December 2018 (see the Document Section for full details).
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