Hospital-at-home Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Hospital-at-Home Pilot in Singapore: A Prospective Quasi-Experimental Cohort Study
NCT number | NCT04330378 |
Other study ID # | 2020/00345 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | January 18, 2021 |
Est. completion date | June 18, 2023 |
Verified date | January 2024 |
Source | National University Health System, Singapore |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
Hospital-at-home models seek to address the impending shortage of hospital beds by reimagining the way we deliver acute hospital-level care - substituting the ward for a patient's home. Such programmes have been well established in other countries such as Australia, Europe and USA to be a less costly way to provide inpatient care as a result of a reduction of fixed costs of building and running hospitals, with equivalent variable costs and comparable clinical outcomes. Acute services are provided at home, including regular visits by doctors, nurses and therapists, intravenous therapy, simple investigations and 24/7 access to doctors. The clinical service is tech-enabled, by remote monitoring and telecommunication technologies. Although overseas experience suggests that hospital-at-home programmes are an effective, safe and scalable substitute for inpatient beds, and promising strategy to meet the bed demands of our ageing population, the outcomes in the local environment is unclear. Singapore has a unique healthcare system compared to primarily insurance driven (USA) or publicly funded (UK and Australia), which favours subsidies of inpatient care compared to community-based care. In addition, cultural beliefs of hospitals as a source of comfort and healing and unfamiliarity with healthcare providers performing home visits may provide unique challenges which may affect outcomes of a hospital-at-home programme in Singapore. In an Asian setting, family and informal caregivers are heavily involved in the care of patients and may pose unique barriers and facilitators to such care at home that may not be evident in similar models in Western countries. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness, feasibility and processes of a new hospital-at-home programme in Singapore.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 378 |
Est. completion date | June 18, 2023 |
Est. primary completion date | May 18, 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 21 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Admitted to one of the following wards: 1. Episodic short stay patients - NUH Extended Diagnosis and Treatment Unit (EDTU) - AH Extended Diagnosis and Treatment Unit (EDTU) - NUH Acute Medical Unit (AMU) 2. Long stay patients requiring ongoing treatment or monitoring - NUH general medicine wards - AH general medicine wards 3. Speciality specific treatment and monitoring with a protocolised approach - Fluid overload admissions from NUH cardiology service - Fluid overload admissions from NUH nephrology service 2. = 21 years old 3. Lives within the Western Cluster of Singapore (pre-specified list of postcodes) 4. Requires continued hospitalisation - The EDTU is a ward within the emergency department that patients can stay for up to 24hours for diagnosis and treatment and meant for discharge after. Some of these patients subsequently require hospital admission, which would be the target group for the pilot. The AMU is a short-stay ward at NUH which aims to discharge patients within 72 hours of stay. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Lives in nursing home 2. Suitable for discharge to other community programmes 3. Planned for discharge the next day (D-1) 4. Haemodynamic instability defined as NEWScore >2 at time of recruitment (a NEWScore =2 in a local setting showed very low rates of transfer to intensive care and death in 24 hours ) 5. Requires oxygen (long term oxygen therapy is acceptable) 6. Acute psychosis or suicidal intent 7. Need for negative pressure isolation 8. Anticipated to deteriorate 9. Planned for imaging, endoscopy, blood transfusion, cardiac stress test, surgery, interventional radiology procedures or ongoing non-medical specialist review 10. Need for intravenous controlled drugs (e.g. morphine) 11. Unable to establish venous access in emergency department 12. Current or former intravenous drug user 13. History of violence towards healthcare workers 14. Cannot provide meals at home 15. Does not have a bed, table and fridge at home 16. Patient or caregiver unable to use a phone 17. House is unsuitable for home visits and medical equipment 18. Unable to be homebound independent, or have a full-time caregiver to assist with daily activities if not homebound independent 19. Caregivers unable or unwilling to manage patient's care at home 20. Projected to require more than 2 weeks of rehab 21. For fluid overload cases, acute myocardial infarction within 5 days 22. Pregnant 23. Anticipated to require sliding scale insulin more than twice a day, where patient and/or caregiver are not able to measure BSL or administer insulin doses at home independently 24. Unable to understand simple instructions for oral self-administration of medication |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Singapore | Alexandra Hospital | Singapore | |
Singapore | National University Hospital | Singapore |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
National University Health System, Singapore | National University of Singapore |
Singapore,
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Shepperd S, Iliffe S, Doll HA, Clarke MJ, Kalra L, Wilson AD, Goncalves-Bradley DC. Admission avoidance hospital at home. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Sep 1;9(9):CD007491. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007491.pub2. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Cost of care | The primary outcome is cost of care which the sum of the following:
Itemised consumables Labour cost of physicians, estimated by the average time spent delivering care multiplied by standard salary (plus benefits) estimates of physicians' respective paygrades. Labour cost of nurses, estimated by the average time spent delivering care multiplied by standard salary (plus benefits) estimates of nurses' respective paygrades Labour cost of allied health (e.g. phlebotomists, physiotherapists) will be estimated by the average time spent delivering care multiplied by standard salary (plus benefits) estimates of their respective paygrades. Any additional costs incurred by the intervention group (e.g. telemonitoring, transport of blood tests) will be itemised as well. |
At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | 30-day readmission rate and attendance rate to emergency department | (planned and unplanned) | 30 days from completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | Death during treatment | (planned and unplanned) | At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | 30-day mortality | (anticipated and unanticipated) | 30 days from enrolment | |
Secondary | Iatrogenic events during treatment period | Composite outcome, total number of events including: falls, new delirium (not present at admission), DVT/PE, New pressure ulcer, Thrombophlebitis, Catheter associate UTI, New Clostridium Difficle Infection, New MRSA acquisition. | At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | Number of bed days in hospital | Length of stay in hospital | At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | Duration of treatment period | Length of stay | At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | ICU/HD transfers | Escalation of care | At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | Patient-reported activity during treatment period | Survey question | At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | Improvement in HR-QoL (EQ-VAS) | Change in EQ-VAS | Between enrolment and 14 days post-enrolment | |
Secondary | Improvement in HR-QoL (EQ-5D) | Change in EQ-5D-5L index score | Between enrolment and 14 days post-enrolment, a higher score means better outcome, ranging from 0 to 1 | |
Secondary | Quality-adjusted-life-days gained | Measured by area-under-the-curve of EQ-5D-5L | Measurements from baseline, at completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) and 14 days post enrolment | |
Secondary | Patient satisfaction score | National University Hospital inpatient satisfaction survey which is adapted from the Care Quality Commission (CQC), Picker Institute and National Research Corporation (NRC) Inpatient Core Questionnaire | At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | Caregiver Burden (if applicable) | Short version Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI) | At completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) | |
Secondary | Care transitions experience | Care Transitions Measure CTM-3 | Within a month after completion of intervention (an average of 7 days) |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
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