Frailty Clinical Trial
— INSPIREOfficial title:
INSPIRE: Feasibility of a Community-based Integrated Care Model for Older Adults Living at Home
Verified date | November 2022 |
Source | University of Basel |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational [Patient Registry] |
Background: The care of older people, often suffering from multiple chronic health problems is complex. As a result, many home-dwelling older people receive long-term care by a large number of care providers often in various care settings, which are neither centralized nor coordinated, putting older people are at risk for fragmented care. To address the complex needs and overcome fragmentation of care, implementation of integrated care models has been recommended. Integrated care has been described as a person-centred model of care that is structured to support coordinated, pro-active care led by a multidisciplinary core team and a lead coordinator communicating and cooperating across and within health and social sectors. However, a systematic review and meta analysis published by our research team could not show convincing evidence regarding the beneficial impact of integrated care models on health and service outcomes. But our study highlighted that the majority of the studies included effectiveness outcomes only and lacked process and implementation outcomes hindering to determine whether the negative conclusions were due to intervention or implementation failure. Therefore, this indicates the need for effectiveness studies which include process evaluations, contextual analysis, and measuring proximal implementation outcomes to determine if, how and why community-based integrated care for frail older adults is successful in practice. To facilitate the uptake of integrated care in daily practice and overcome implementation issues, principles and methods from the field of implementation science should be incorporated into future research. In January 2018, the Canton Basel-Landschaft (BL) published a new legal framework to redesign care for home-dwelling older people in the canton. This legal framework mandates the reorganization of the Canton BL into larger care regions and the creation of an Information and Advice Center (IAC) in each of these care regions. The legislation mandates the IAC to be staffed with at least a nurse. Subsequently, the INSPIRE research team has been working together with the Canton and the care region of Leimental to help operationalize and evaluate a care model for the IAC. The overall INSPIRE project is a three-phase implementation science project which aims to develop, implement and evaluate an integrated care model for the IAC for home-dwelling older adults in Canton BL. Phase 1: consisted in the development of the community-based integrated care model. Phase 2: We will assess the feasibility of the community-based integrated model of care at the IAC in Leimental. Phase 3: we will evaluate the effectiveness of this intervention. The current study focuses in the phase 2. Aims: 1. assess feasibility of recruitment to the IAC including external (e.g., strategies used to promote the IAC services) and internal processes (e.g., the number of visitors to the IAC; how clients heard of the IAC; among others); 2. assess the adoption, acceptability, feasibility, and fidelity of the integrated care model at the IAC BPA in Leimental; 3. explore perceptions of older adults and their caregivers, IAC staff, and external health and social care providers towards the implemented care model, and if adaptations are needed to the care model or the implementation strategies/process. Design: The feasibility study uses multiple methods. For aim 1, a descriptive study will be conducted to monitor the strategies used to promote the IAC and to assess which ones worked in getting older adults to reach out to the IAC. To address aims 2 and 3, a parallel convergent mixed methods observational design will be used, being the core aspect of this phase. A combination of administrative data, health record reviews, older adult and informal caregiver interviews, IAC staff meetings, and a questionnaire of community professional collaborators will be used to meet the aims of the feasibility study. Sample: For this study, multiple samples will be included to collect administrative data, implementation outcomes, and individual characteristics of consenting older adults who used the IAC services: external (people respondents to promotion strategies) and internal (all visitors to the IAC); older adults; frail older adults who receive a CGA and their informal caregivers; the IAC nurse and social worker; and community professionals who collaborate with the IAC in care coordination. Measurements & Outcomes: Engagement measures will be provided by the IAC Administration about all visitors to the IAC. Implementation outcomes will be captured from IAC staff; older adults visiting the IAC (or with home appointments) and their informal caregivers; and community healthcare collaborators using a combination of meeting logs, interviews, IAC health records, and a questionnaire. The estimation of time-driven activity-based cost will be captured by using information provided by the IAC staff.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 12 |
Est. completion date | October 10, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | September 30, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Older adults (1A) All older adults visiting/contacting the Information and Advice Center Older adults (1B) Inclusion criteria: Aged 64 years or older (as this is the statutory retirement age for women in Switzerland and the minimum age of the group we expect to use the Fachstelle services) Living at home German or English-speaking Providing Individual/Proxy Informed Consent (See "3A Informed Consent - Older adult"/"3B Informed Consent -Relative"). Had a Fachstelle health record created Exclusion criteria: Residing in a nursing home or planned permanent admission to a nursing home Receiving end-of-life care Older adults (1C) Inclusion criteria: Aged 75 years or older Living at home Living in the participating care region Leimental English or German-speaking Groningen Frailty Indicator [GFI] =4 If the older adult had a CGA by the IAC staff Providing Individual/Proxy Informed Consent (See 3A "Informed Consent - Older adult"/ 3B "Informed Consent -Relative") Exclusion criteria: Residing in a nursing home or planned permanent admission to a nursing home Receiving end-of-life care Participation in another study with health-related interventions within the 30 days preceding or during the present study GFI < 4 If the older adult did not have a CGA by the IAC staff Informal caregivers (2) Inclusion criteria: Individuals who attended a IAC appointment (in the center or at home) with a participating older adult. The older adult must agree for the INSPIRE research team to contact the informal caregiver. Exclusion criteria: Individuals who did not attend a IAC appointment with a participating older adult or who were not present in a home visit by IAC staff (as the interview questions focus on their perception of the IAC's feasibility and acceptability) Any individuals whom the older adult did not agree for the INSPIRE research team to be contacted IAC nurse and social worker (3) Inclusion criteria: • Individuals employed by the IAC BPA Leimental as a Nurse or Social Worker Exclusion criteria: • Other individuals employed by the IAC BPA Leimental (e.g., Administration) External collaborators (4) Inclusion criteria: • Individual health or social care providers who are indicated in the IAC health record as having worked together with the IAC nurse(s) or social worker in the care coordination of a participating older adult Exclusion criteria: • Individual health or social care providers who have not contributed to the coordination of care with the IAC staff for a participating older adult |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Switzerland | Fachstelle BPA Leimental (Information and Advice Center of Leimental) | Oberwil | Basel-Landschaft |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Basel | Aerztegesellschaft Basellland, Basel Institute for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Basel-Landschaft Swisslos, Basel-Landschaft volkswirtschafts- und gesundheitsdirektion, Duke University, European Commission, KU Leuven, Swiss National Science Foundation, Swiss Tropical & Public Health Institute, University of Zurich |
Switzerland,
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* Note: There are 26 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Individual characteristics to describe the sample of consenting older adults (sample 1B) using the IAC services | Demographic data: age, gender, and living situation
Geriatric risk profile: using the Groningen Frailty Indicator (GFI) where a score of =4 represents moderate to severe frailty. Other information to be extracted from the health record of each participant: cognition, depressive symptoms, multimorbidity, nutritional status, and fall history |
at baseline: 1 week after enrollment | |
Primary | To assess the adoption of the integrated care model at the IAC, and explore perceptions of IAC staff towards the implemented care model, and if adaptations are needed to the care model or the implementation strategies. | - Adoption is defined as the intention, initial decision, or action to try to employ a new intervention. Adoption will be qualitatively determined during the study through the regular meetings with the IAC Nurse(s) and Social Worker ([sample 3]. These regular meetings will be led by the INSPIRE research team (e.g., Implementation Lead). | 2 months | |
Primary | To assess the acceptability of the integrated care model at the IAC, and explore perceptions of older adults and their caregivers, IAC staff towards the implemented care model. | - Acceptability is defined as the perception among stakeholders that the intervention is agreeable (31). Acceptability will be captured qualitatively through regular meetings with the IAC Nurse(s) and Social worker (sample 3) as well as through interviews with a nested sample of older adults (e.g., aged 75+, Groningen Frailty Indicator [GFI] score =4, received a CGA; see sample 1C) and their informal caregiver (sample 2; e.g., spouse, family member or neighbour), when possible. | 2 months | |
Primary | To assess the feasibility of the integrated care model at the IAC, and explore perceptions of older adults and their caregivers, and IAC staff towards the implemented care model | - Feasibility is defined as the perception among participating care providers that the intervention is feasible (31). Feasibility will be assessed for recruitment (e.g., referral to the IAC) and aspects of the care model (i.e., screening, CGA, creation of a care plan and collaboration to coordinate care, and follow-up). Feasibility will be captured qualitatively in this study through a) the regular meetings with the IAC staff (sample 3) and b) the interviews with a nested sample of participating older adults (sample 1C) and informal caregivers (sample 2), when possible. A final consensus meeting will be held at the end of the study with the INSPIRE research team, the Head of the IAC and the IAC Nurse(s) and Social Worker to confirm whether the care model is indeed "feasible" and we are ready to move into the effectiveness study. | 2 months | |
Primary | To assess the fidelity of the integrated care model at the IAC, and explore perceptions of the IAC staff towards the implemented care model, and if adaptations are needed to the care model or the implementation strategies. | - Fidelity is defined as the degree to which the intervention is implemented as it was designed in the original protocol. Fidelity will be quantitatively measured in this study phase by reviewing participating older adults' IAC health records (see sample 1B; e.g., aged 64+, living at home, have a IAC health record) to primarily determine if the care model components (i.e., screening, comprehensive geriatric assessment [CGA], care coordination and individualized care plan, and follow-up were delivered as intended. Fidelity will also be explored qualitatively in the regular meetings with the IAC staff (sample 3). | 2 months | |
Primary | To explore implementation processes related to collaboration between IAC staff and external health and social care professionals when coordinating care for an older adult | - The Normalization MeAsure Development questionnaire (NoMAD) will be sent to external health and social care providers who have collaborated with the IAC staff for coordination of care of a participating older adult. It is a three-part (A, B, C), 23-item survey. Part A (2-items) asks about their role and job category; in part B, two general questions about the intervention are rated with a response scale of 0-10 (0=not at all, 5=somewhat, 10=completely); and part C (19-items) is in the format of a 5-point Likert scale to indicate level of agreement (1=strongly agree, 3=neutral, 5=strongly disagree). There are four constructs assessed in Part C which are related to the Normalization Process Theory, being: a) coherence (4-items), b) cognitive participation (4-items), c) collective action (7-items; 1 of which we removed due to context), and d) reflexive monitoring (5-items). The NoMAD has a reliability of a = 0.89 for the 20 items and has been cited in many research studies | 2 months | |
Secondary | To assess feasibility of recruitment to the Fachstelle and evaluate recruitment strategies | External processes: monitoring outreach strategies used to promote the IAC to older adults (e.g., letters, brochures) and to sources who could refer/recommend the IAC to older adults (e.g., in-person meetings with Hospitals or Spitex) as well as respondents to the outreach strategies (e.g., # of Hospitals who administer flyers to their staff).
Internal processes: summarized information related to IAC use of all visitors/home appointments (sample 1A - see Table 2 for criteria), including: number of visitors/home appointment users sociodemographic data of all visitors/home appointments users: age, gender, municipality of residence reason for their appointment/contacting the IAC and referral source (i.e., how they heard about the IAC, and/or the organization which referred them) type of service received by visitors/IAC users: a) health promotion and prevention; b) a full CGA; c) a brief assessment to confirm whether a nursing home referral is warranted; or d) other |
2 months |
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