Health Status Clinical Trial
Official title:
Developing A Simple Segmentation Tool to Understand Elderly Health Status and Needs in Singapore
Background: The delivery of targeted, patient-centered care for a population with
heterogeneous healthcare needs while moderating costs is a key challenge in healthcare.
Segmentation of patient populations based on clinically distinguishing features and social
healthcare needs is currently a promising method for informing the organization of
healthcare supply to these needs.
Aims: In this prospective cohort study, the investigators aim to assess the Simple
Segmenting Tool (SST) as a method of patient population segmentation in terms of its
inter-rater reliability, as well as convergent and predictive validity. We will also revise
the tool based on feedback from the validity studies should the need arises.
Hypothesis: The investigators hypothesize that the SST is able to exhibit good inter-rater
reliability, convergent validity and predictive validity for adverse events.
Methodology: Non-critical patients aged 55 and above presenting to the Emergency Department
will be screened with the SST. Raters will be paired in order to assess inter-rater
reliability. To test convergent validity, the LACE, SF-12, and Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS)
will also be used. Finally, predictive validity will be assessed by evaluating adverse event
rates of patients in each SST category. Adverse events include all-cause mortality, length
of hospital stay, emergency department visit and unplanned hospital readmission.
Significance to Health Services Delivery: This study will provide evidence supporting the
use of a standardized tool for evaluating the medical and social needs of patients at
various sites of care. Following which, tailored packages of healthcare services can then be
delivered in order to meet these needs.
Background: In the context of a young population, Singapore has established a superb system
of care, focusing largely on acute hospitals and specialty services. This has addressed the
needs of a dominantly young population, which are usually acute and self-limited, associated
with asymptomatic risks, and occasionally relate to single disabling or life-limiting
conditions.
As a population ages, the needs for health and related social services change as more and
more individuals shift into more complex stages, with multiple conditions, loss of
resilience, and late decline; addressing the needs associated with these stages is less
amenable to an acute care, disease-centric approach. The needs of an older population are in
some ways similar to those of a younger population (though generally of a greater likelihood
and degree); however, the elderly require different strategies for supporting them through
the later stages of their lives. For example:
- For chronic asymptomatic risk factors, the elderly may be more or less benefited by
screening, definitive testing, and treatment;
- Elders may be less likely to have their risk factors identified and successfully
managed;
- Elders may have unidentified symptomatic, treatable conditions (e.g., cataract);
- Social issues, such as family support and social networks may have a dominant effect on
the introduction, use and success of medical interventions;
- Elders experience a loss of resilience which may occur without anyone being aware, and
through self-reinforcement can lead to frank frailty (e.g., both as a phenotype and as
a physiological state of loss of reserve in multiple systems);
- Though end of life issues are not unique to elders, supporting older people through the
late stages of life-limiting conditions presents distinctive features, which can
require a different set of services;
- The high and increasing use of acute services by elderly; both in volume and in
proportion to their numbers) may point to opportunities to care for elders at complex
stages of health more effectively, humanely, and sustainably.
The primary aim of this study is to validate the Simple Segmentation Tool (SST) as a method
of patient population segmentation in terms of inter-rater reliability, as well as
convergent validity and predictive validity.
Design of the SST
1. To address the expanding needs of the elderly, it is important to take a person-centric
approach , tailoring services to the individual. From a health system perspective, this
presents a challenge for at least two reasons. First, health system services have
focused on sites of care and thus one may miss opportunities to alleviate progression
to complex stages, with high morbidity and cost. Second, implementing excessively
tailored programs can be extremely expensive from a health system perspective,
especially when they are hospital-based.
To address the above challenges, the investigators propose a population segmentation
approach. This entails assigning categories of health and associated social features
that characterize "packages" of interventions that aim to alleviate progression to more
symptomatic/higher risk categories, and improve quality of life. This approach has been
advocated internationally (Hewner & Seo, 2014; Van Der Laan, Van Offenbeek, Broekhuis,
& J., 2014; Zhou, Wong, & Li, 2014), following foundational work by Lynne et al (Lynn,
Straube, Bell, Jencks, & Kambic, 2007). Population segmentation recognizes that while
there is wide diversity among people and individualized approaches to care,
understanding prototypical needs can be a powerful tool for purposes of planning and
evaluation of health and social services.
2. The Simple Segmentation Tool was designed to facilitate the segmentation of an ageing
Singapore population so as to facilitate the provision of cost-effective person-centric
care. Specifically, the tool facilitates the capture of meso-level medical needs and
complicating factors of a patient before classifying said patient into one of 7 medical
categories and one of 3 care complexity levels.
A healthcare need in the context of the SST is defined as a potential to benefit from
healthcare whereupon benefit can be understood as a reduction in the probability of a
patient transitioning into a worse clinical state or experiencing an adverse clinical
outcome. Meanwhile, the type of needs that the SST captures are normative needs which
are needs of a patient as assessed by a clinician.
The 7 medical global impressions of patient of the SST were adapted from the original 8
based on the "Bridges to Health" model by Joanne Lynn et al (Lynn et al., 2007) in
order to better suit our evaluation of an elderly population. Patients are classified
into one of the 7 health categories namely 1) Healthy, 2) Acutely ill but curable, 3)
Chronic conditions, asymptomatic, 4) Chronic conditions, stable, 5) Long course of
decline, 6) Limited reserve and serious exacerbation and 7) Short period of decline
before dying; that best characterizes their most salient clinical needs in the medium
to long term (months to years). With the exception of the category "Acutely ill but
curable" all patients should only be assigned into one category at any point in time.
The complicating factors section of the SST is designed to measure the degree of need
in 8 different healthcare relevant characteristics. These characteristics were selected
based on their significance towards patient management at transitional points of care.
They are as follows: 1) functional assessment, 2) social support in case of need, 3)
hospital admissions in last 6 months, 4) disruptive behavioral issues, 5) polypharmacy,
6) organization of care, 7) activation in own care, and 8) skilled nursing type task
needs.
Decline in ADL function (Buurman, Parlevliet, Van Deelen, De Haan, & De Rooij, 2010)
and recent unplanned hospital readmissions (L. W. & C. K. W., 1999) are known to
precede unplanned hospital readmission. On the other hand, social support enhances an
individual's ability to cope with stressors, promotes health-seeking behavior, and also
provides basic healthcare services (Glanz, Rimer, & Viswanath, 2008). Disruptive
behavioral issues are important to characterize as they can cause significant caregiver
stress (Ahn & Horgas, 2013) . Complex medication management plans due to polypharmacy
(Cameli et al., 2012) or multiple healthcare provider confusion (Services, 2010) are
important to recognize so as to prevent iatrogenic harm to patient. Finally, the degree
of patient activation (Mosen et al., 2007) as well as successful management of
geriatric syndromes (Van Craen et al., 2010) if present are also important determinants
of elderly health.
Depending on the highest level of social healthcare need identified in the patient, the
following complexity category can then be assigned. For example, if the highest level
of social healthcare need identified is a 1 for Polypharmacy, the patient is thus
deemed as moderately complex.
Complexity can be understood as an "interference with standard care"(Peek, Baird, &
Coleman, 2009). Increased complexity in a patient increases the probability of failure
of a medical intervention and hence needs to be recognized and mitigated in order to
improve clinical outcomes.
The SST is designed for use in an outpatient setting. Clinicians trained in its use are
expected to first assess a patient as part of their routine clinical assessment before
using the SST to categorize the patient. By keeping the number of inputs required from
the clinician brief and succinct, it is hoped that utilization of the SST integrates
well with usual clinic operational flow.
3. Validation and Improvement of the SST
As the SST is a novel tool, it needs to be psychometrically validated before it can be used
to segment patient populations in various sites of provision of healthcare.There are various
benefits associated with successful validation of the tool in the proposed manner:
Inter-rater reliability: Validation would allow us to assess the interchangeability of
potential users of the tool in a heterogenous patient population (Gwet, 2010). If the
investigators are able to establish interchangeability of clinicians of different
backgrounds and experience such as senior doctors, nurses and even medical students, the
investigators may then be able to more easily operationalize the tool since more medical
personnel will be able to reliably administer it.
Convergent validity: Validation would allow us to verify that two measures of constructs
that theoretically should be related, are in fact related (Trochim, 2006). Demonstration of
convergent validity when the SST is paired with widely accepted and validated pre-existing
tools will allow us to gain reasonable confidence in the ability of the tool to capture
similar constructs.
Predictive validity: Validation that the SST can be used to predict future health status or
healthcare utilization patterns such as unplanned readmissions after discharge would
increase the SST's utility for shaping interventions that target high readmission risk
individuals in a bid to lower their risk of unplanned hospital readmissions.
Based on the results of the validation studies, the SST can be further modified to make it
optimally robust before subsequent patient segmentation studies in the various sites of
care. For example, specific sections of the SST with low inter-rater reliability or
convergent validity can be modified to improve the tool's psychometric properties.
SST Benefit 1 - Identification of leverage points for intervention. Through cross-sectional
and longitudinal studies of patient profiles in terms of their medical and social healthcare
needs using the SST, areas that are characterized by high healthcare needs can be detected
in the various sites of care thus allowing for implementation of health service
interventions in order to better meet these healthcare needs. Furthermore, longitudinal
studies would allow for the determination of risk factors associated with increased
transition rates from lower to higher severity global impression of patient category thus
also facilitating targeted follow up intervention studies.
Health service reorganization to better meet areas of high healthcare need would lead to
improved clinical outcomes through reduction in the probability of clinical complications.
In the context of an ageing population this would help keep more elderly healthy and
functional for a longer period of time thus reducing healthcare costs associated with
exacerbation of chronic diseases.
SST Benefit 2 - Greater accountability. Better identification of areas of healthcare need
allows for better comparison between needs and clinical infrastructure or services provided
so as to allow for greater accountability in the delivery of healthcare. Services which do
not meet identified needs can be scaled down so as to reduce healthcare costs. Resources
both financial and manpower alike can then be diverted towards areas of greater need.
SST Benefit 3 - Packages of care. Understanding the common combinations of population
medical needs and complicating factors would allow for packages of care to be developed
which are designed for common prototypical patients and can be easily modified to suit
individual patients. Such an approach would allow for more effective resource planning and
capitation bundling purposes, as well as integrate the delivery of healthcare interventions
for the patient.
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