Health Related Quality of Life Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Care for Children With Complex Needs (I3CN) Study
Seattle Children's Hospital (SCH), in collaboration with several health plans and Washington State Department of Social and Health Services developed the Comprehensive Case Management (CCM) program with the goal to reduce costs of care for medically complex children cared for at SCH as well as improve their health status and the quality of care they receive. The CCM program aims to develop and facilitate a reliable and standardized process that empowers the child's primary care provider and provides him/her with the resources s/he needs to avoid unnecessary emergency department visits and admissions. Our study will include children who had a hospitalization or emergency department visit at Seattle Children's between 2009-2012 and, at that time, had multiple active chronic medical issues but had no specialty service at Seattle Children's to help their primary care providers manage them.
Children with complex health care needs often lack a comprehensive care plan and access to
case management. They are at risk for frequent and prolonged hospitalizations, fragmented
care, parental stress/burnout and unsafe care. To address this issue, Seattle Children's
Hospital developed the Comprehensive Case Management (CCM) program, which includes access to
a special clinic at Seattle Children's with case managers and a health care team that works
with parents and community physicians to create care plans for children with complex needs.
The investigators goal is to evaluate whether children who participate in the CCM program
have better parent reported access to needed care, timeliness of receiving needed services,
more coordinated care, improved health status, and higher parent satisfaction with care
compared to children who receive care outside the CCM program. In addition, the investigators
will examine whether these children experience decreased annual costs of care, emergency
department visits, hospital admissions, and hospital lengths of stay compared to children
receiving care outside the program. The investigators also want to understand whether
community physicians who have patients enrolled in the CCM program are more satisfied with
caring for children with complex medical needs than physicians caring for these children
outside the program.
The investigators plan to enroll 650 parents of eligible children into the I3CN study. Three
hundred twenty five of these parents will have children enrolled in the CCM program and 325
will have children who continue to receive usual care. Enrolled parents complete a survey
every 6 months during the study (5 surveys over 2 ½ years) in order to assess study outcomes
including parent perceived. Parent participation in the study will be completed 2 ½ years
after enrollment.
When a child enrolls in the CCM program, the child's parent will work together with the CCM
team at Seattle Children's to develop a shared care plan for their child. The CCM team
includes physicians, nurse practitioners, social workers, nutritionists, and nurse case
managers. This plan will include all of the child's routine health care needs in addition to
information about what to do when the child gets sick. Community providers will also be asked
to review and provide input on the shared care plan. Once the shared care plan is in place,
the parent, primary care provider (PCP), and the CCM clinic will follow the standardized
processes established by the program and the shared care plan when the child becomes ill.
During the course of the 2 ½ year study, the investigators will analyze our outcomes of
interest every 6 months. If the investigators find that children in the CCM the program are
experiencing significantly better outcomes than children receiving care outside the program,
they will stop the study and open the program to all eligible children.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT02741700 -
SToRytelling to Improve DiseasE Outcomes in GOut: The STRIDE-GO2 Study
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06274203 -
High Dose Vitamin D Supplementation in Children With Sickle Cell Disease
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05008159 -
A Community-based Program That Supports Physical Activity, Healthy Eating, Social Participation and System Navigation in Older Adults
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04073862 -
The Norwegian Stepped-Care TF-CBT Study
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03910894 -
Health-related Quality of Life in Colon Cancer
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT06262334 -
Evaluating the Fade to Fitness Program: A Barbershop-based Program for Black Men
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04756011 -
Health-related Quality of Life and Psychosocial Aspects of Diabetes Technology (Insulin Pumps)
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT03081312 -
A Study of Family Caregivers' Needs, Burden of Care and Quality of Life Over the Course of a Cancer Illness
|
||
Completed |
NCT03392454 -
A Case Series Comparing T+LRTI to Partial Trapeziectomy for Thumb Osteoarthritis
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05424094 -
HRQoL in Overweight and Obese Children/Adolescents
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04720677 -
Psychometric Properties of Adapted Turkish Version of ISYQOL Questionnaire in Patients With AIS
|
||
Completed |
NCT05829707 -
Long-term Outcomes of Breast Cancer Patients After Wound Infiltration Analgesia
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT01784497 -
Health Related Quality of Life Assessment In Egyptian Recipients After Living Donor Liver Transplantation
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05851339 -
Determinants of Health-related Quality of Life for Patients After Renal Lithotripsy: PNL Versus RIRS
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05824312 -
HRQOL in Locally Advanced Thyroid Carcinoma
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05691036 -
Bile Acids Metabolism and Genetic Mutation Profile in the ICP in the Indian Population
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04653298 -
Health-related Quality of Life in Adults After Veno-arterial Extra-Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation Which is a Salvage Therapy Used in Patients With Severe Respiratory or Cardiac Failure Who Have Not Responded to Maximal Conventional Medical Therapy
|
||
Completed |
NCT02982746 -
Can a Person-centred-care Intervention Improve Health-related Quality of Life in Patients With Head and Neck Cancer
|
N/A |