Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04442438 |
Other study ID # |
CH2018-01 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
November 1, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2022 |
Source |
Radboud University Medical Center |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Burnout syndrome (BOS) has a high prevalence in critical care nurses and physicians. Both
personal characteristics and work-related factors have been associated with BOS. Despite this
high prevalence of burnout and its potential for serious consequences, few studies have
tested interventions to address the problem. Whereas person-directed interventions may be
effective for periods less than 6 months, changes in the organization tend to have a longer
lasting effect. Lack of participation in morally complex decision-making is assumed to be an
important risk factor for the development of burnout symptoms. Implementation of structured,
multi-professional medical ethical decision-making - so called moral case deliberation (MCD)
- is proven feasible in an ICU setting. Health care workers involved in patient care
perceived that active participation in ethical decision making resulted in better awareness
of the background of the individual decisions and improved understanding of the ethical
dilemma. The effects of this intervention on health-care workers well-being was not
investigated.
Description:
Studies have shown that healthcare professionals working at the ICU are exposed to greater
risk of developing burnout than colleagues working in other fields of medicine (Moss, Good,
Gozal, Kleinpell, & Sessler, 2016). It is widely suggested that moral distress, resulting
from morally problematic situations particular for the ICU, is an important risk factor for
burnout (Fumis, Junqueira Amarante, de Fatima Nascimento, & Vieira Junior, 2017). One
suggested way to help caregivers mitigate moral distress is moral case deliberation. Moral
case deliberation is a structured dialogue between healthcare providers about ethically
problematic situations in their daily practice. It has been widely held that frequent moral
case deliberation may help healthcare providers to better appreciate moral problems, to learn
about their own and others' moral viewpoints, to foster a sense cohesion within their team
and to mitigate moral distress (Haan, van Gurp, Naber, & Groenewoud, 2018). Moral case
deliberation may particularly help professionals if it is based on professionals' own
objectives in and experiences and expectations of moral case deliberation. It is therefore
needed to firmly root moral case deliberation in the ICU practice together with/with the help
of ICU-professionals (Weidema, van Dartel, & Molewijk, 2016). Healthcare professionals
themselves are best able to evaluate, learn from and adjust the practice of moral case
deliberation on the ICU.
This research sets out to assess the claim that moral case deliberation can help mitigate
moral distress among healthcare providers and as such reduce the risk of burnout. It does so
by employing Mixed Methods Action Research (MMAR), through which the research will be
conducted through and with ICU-professionals, creating co-ownership of moral case
deliberation among participants. The study hopes to achieve that, instead of developing
burnout as a consequence of moral distress, moral case deliberation will help IC
professionals learn from morally distressing situations, potentially leading to cultural an
organizational improvement and improvement of quality of care.
Research questions to be answered:
1. How does moral distress, as a supposed risk factor for burnout of IC-professionals,
relate to other risk factors of burnout, personality, negative work-home interactions
and the ICU context?
2. How do IC-professionals experience preparation, participation and the impact on daily
practice of particular moral case deliberations?
3. Does moral case deliberation lead to a reduction of moral distress, burnout and team
cohesion?
4. How can IC-professionals establish cumulative learning from moral case deliberation
throughout their department?
Methods:
Quantitative methods Quantitative methods will be used to assess questions 1 and 3. Survey
data will be gathered in a stepped wedge trial. Surveys will be sent to around 450
ICU-professionals which are nested in six ICUs, nested in two hospitals. The data thus has a
multilevel structure (individuals in units in hospitals). The study aims for a response rate
of 50% or higher, including more than 230 participants. This is expectation is formulated on
the basis of the departments' experience of response rates in previous studies done in this
population. During the trial, the different ICUs will receive the intervention in a stepwise
manner. Within a stepped wedge design, what is randomized is the time point at which a unit
receives the intervention. One unit starts in January 2020 and will receive the intervention
for the full two years. Two units will start participating as of July 2020 and will then
participate until December 2021. In January 2021, two other units will start participating.
The last unit will receive the intervention as of July 2021 and participate for the remaining
six months.
Survey data will be gathered at five measurement points, after every 6 months, the first
being a baseline measurement. The baseline measurement will take place before January 2020,
the second measurement will take place before July 2020, the third measurement will take in
the months preceding January 2021, the fourth measurement will take place in the months
preceding July 2021 and the last measurement will take place in December 2021. The survey
consists of validated measurements for burnout syndrome (UBOS-C), moral distress (MDS-R),
work-home interaction (SWING), personality (BFI), departmental culture (Culture of Care
Barometer) and team cohesion (a set of six questions taken from the Safety Attitudes
Questionnaire).
The baseline data will inspire answering research question 1. Hierarchical linear regression
analysis will be used to assess the association between several concepts (e.g. moral
distress, work-home interaction, personality). With hierarchical regression analysis, the
explaining variance of moral distress on burn-out, controlled for burnout risk factors such
as work-home interaction and personality, will be analysed. Hierarchical linear regression is
a framework for model comparison: several regression models are built by adding variables to
previous model at each new step and thus, later models always include the previous smaller
models. The question is whether the newly added variable shows a significant improvement in
the proportion of explained variance of burnout (the R2).
The survey data gathered at all five measurement points is suited for analysis which allows
for assessment of question 3. The data gathered in the stepped wedge design, in which
clusters (units) are randomized, is well suited for interrupted time series analysis.
Interrupted time series analysis is used to evaluate the effect of an intervention in
longitudinal data. The key assumption of interrupted time series analysis of this data is
that moral case deliberation, as an intervention, changes the pre-intervention trend of
burnout prevalence among ICU-professionals; in other words, it assumes that the
pre-intervention trend would continue unchanged into the post-intervention period if there
had not been an intervention. Training, as well as the advice of an expert statistician
(Steven Teerenstra), will be sought to gain better insight in conducting interrupted time
series analysis.