Obstructive Sleep Apnea Clinical Trial
— PCORIOfficial title:
Peer-Driven Intervention as an Alternate Model of Care Delivery and Coordination for Sleep Apnea
Verified date | June 2017 |
Source | University of Arizona |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Fragmentation of care can lead to poor treatment adherence in patients with chronic medical
conditions which can, in turn, lead to adverse health consequences, poor quality of life, and
patient dissatisfaction. Poor treatment adherence may be due to lack of sufficient patient
education, time delays in delivery of care, lack of adequate healthcare coordination, or
difficulty accessing various healthcare providers across a front desk which serves as a
"healthcare bottle-neck". Better efficiency in healthcare delivery, with greater connectivity
through knowledgeable and trained peer volunteers and inexpensive cell-phones integrated by a
smart telephone exchange may alleviate some of the care and communication burden faced by the
healthcare system. Specifically, such community health education volunteers ("peer-buddies")
who are experienced in managing their disease condition may be able to impart knowledge and
confidence to a recently diagnosed patient in a much more personalized manner than that of a
group therapy session. An additional important advantage is the peer-buddy's ability to
relate to the patient in a manner consistent with their social, ethnic, and cultural believes
without language barriers or differences that may stem from socioeconomic strata. We will use
sleep apnea as an example condition to test the effect of a peer-buddy helper (combined with
the universal availability of personal cell phones) on the problem of poor care coordination
and treatment adherence to the "CPAP" treatment for sleep apnea. Sleep apnea is a very common
condition that affects 7-12% of the US population, and if left untreated, can lead to poor
health and even death through its effects on high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, and
motor vehicle accidents. Fortunately, CPAP therapy can lead to a 3-fold reduction in such
consequences, but patient adherence to such CPAP treatment is generally poor. We have
recently completed a small study that demonstrated improved usage of CPAP treatment by
patients receiving help from a peer-buddy with excellent results. We propose to further
enhance the "peer-buddy" community-volunteer concept in our proposed research by combining
this with cell-phone technology and a telephone exchange that improves access to healthcare
providers, technicians, and home care companies. We hope to show that active community
participation by experienced "lay individuals" assisted by the universal availability of
cheap cell-phones can improve the reach and effectiveness of our healthcare system in
improving the health and well-being of our patients. If successful, such an innovative and
community-based approach can be applied to other chronic medical conditions.
Hypothesis #1: We hypothesize that patients in the peer-driven intervention with interactive
voice response (PDI-IVR) group will experience a greater patient satisfaction (measured by
Likert scale64,70 and PACIC71,72) and perception of care coordination (measured by CPCQ72,73)
than patients in the usual care (control) group.
Hypothesis #2: We hypothesize that patients in the PDI-IVR group will experience a greater
CPAP adherence (measured by device download), patient activation (PAM), and self-efficacy
(SEMSA) than patients in the usual care (control) group.
Hypothesis #3: We hypothesize that patients in the PDI-IVR group will experience greater
improvements in HR-QOL (measured by FOSQ) vigilance (psychomotor vigilance testing) and blood
pressure than patients in the usual care (control) group.
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 362 |
Est. completion date | August 2017 |
Est. primary completion date | August 2017 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 85 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria for Subject: - Obstructive Sleep Apnea - 18-85 years of age - Availability of cell or other reliable phone line Inclusion Criteria for Peer Buddy: - Adherent to CPAP therapy ( greater than 4 hours per night of CPAP use) - Willing to meet with subject on 2 occasions in-person - Has a cell or other reliable telephone line and able to converse with subject on 8 occasions over the first 3 months and be available subsequently for a 3 month period on an as-needed basis - Willing to undergo 2 training and orientation sessions with the Principal Investigator and research staff followed by a mock patient interaction session. Exclusion Criteria for Subject: - Central sleep apnea - Participation in another intervention-based research study - Patient's primary care provider refuses patient participation for medical instability Exclusion Criteria for Peer Buddy: - Central sleep apnea - Participation in another intervention-based research study - Patient's primary care provider refuses patient participation for medical instability - Patients suffering from major depression or other major psychiatric illness - Shift-worker or frequent out of town traveler - Unwilling to participate in orientation and training session or unable to "graduate" from the mock patient interaction session with study staff |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Arizona Center for Sleep Disorders | Tucson | Arizona |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Arizona | Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute |
United States,
Parthasarathy S, Wendel C, Haynes PL, Atwood C, Kuna S. A pilot study of CPAP adherence promotion by peer buddies with sleep apnea. J Clin Sleep Med. 2013 Jun 15;9(6):543-50. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.2744. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Patient rating of sleep-specific services (Usual Care, Peer Buddy System) | Patients will rate their global satisfaction of how satisfied they are with the care received from their sleep physician and sleep center on a 5-point scale: very satisfied, satisfied, neutral, dissatisfied, very dissatisfied | Day 180 | |
Secondary | Patient Assessment of Care for Chronic Conditions (PACIC) ( Usual Care, Peer Buddy System) | Derived from AHRQ care coordination measures atlas, measures care that is patient-centered, includes collaborative goal setting; problem-solving and follow-up support within the past 6 months and consists of five sub scales addressing the patient activation, delivery system design, goal setting, problem solving, and follow-up/coordination. | Day 180 | |
Secondary | Client perception of care coordination (CPCQ) (Usual Care, Peer Buddy System) | A measure of coordination of health care from the AHRQ care coordination measures atlas that is useful for assessment and program evaluation of individual and provider units as well as research into patient experience and measurement of patient-focused care. | Day 180 | |
Secondary | Consumer Assessment of Health Plans Survey (CAHPS v4.0) item (Usual Care, Peer Buddy System) | Health plan member's satisfaction with care on 0 to 10 scale (0 is the "worst " and 10 is the "best health plan possible") | Day 180 | |
Secondary | CPAP Adherence downloads (Peer Buddy System) | All CPAP devices have internal adherence monitoring which can be downloaded using a computer cable, smart card, SD chip or wireless transmission. The objective, adherence information as 'mask-on' time for 6 months, number of nights used, cumulative hours used, average hours of CPAP use per night, and average number of hours per day of CPAP use will be derived. The proportion of days in which CPAP use was at least 4 hr (Medicare criterion) will also be utilized. | Day 30, Day 90, Day 180 | |
Secondary | Patient Activation Measure (PAM) (Peer Buddy System) | The Patient Activation Measure (PAM) is a 22-item measure that assesses patient knowledge, skill, and confidence for self-management | Baseline, Day 90, Day 180 | |
Secondary | Self-efficacy measure for sleep apnea (SEMSA) ( Peer Buddy System) | SEMSA is a tool with strong psychometric properties and has the potential for identifying patient perceptions that may indicate those most likely to not adhere to treatment. There are 3 domains that contribute to global score: (a) Measure of perceived risk is rated on a 4-point scale ranging from very low to very high. (b) Outcome expectancies are surveyed by a 4-point scale seeking responses (ranging from not at all true to very true) to statements of potential general outcomes if CPAP is or was not used. (c) Self-efficacy, or the volition to use CPAP therapy, is evaluated by asking the respondent to rate on a 4-point scale the level of validity (ranging from 'not at all true' to 'very true') of statements regarding their confidence in using CPAP. | Baseline, Day 90, Day 180 | |
Secondary | Functional Outcomes of Sleep Questionnaire (FOSQ) ( Peer Buddy System) | A condition-specific functional status measure designed to evaluate the impact of disorders of excessive sleepiness on activities of daily living. Lower global scores are associated with greater dysfunction. FOSQ has good to excellent test-retest reproducibility, internal consistency, with discriminate validity between those seeking medical attention for sleep disorders compared to normal subjects. | Baseline, Day 90, Day 180 | |
Secondary | Psychomotor vigilance task (PVT) (Peer Buddy System) | PVT is a "video game" measure of an individual's (vigilance) readiness to detect and respond to certain specified small changes in a labile environment, conceptualized pragmatically within a visio-reactive framework. Essentially, a stop clock is set at zero and begins to suddenly and spontaneously run at various time points in multiple (5) trials. As soon as the subject notices the clock start to run, they click a button that registers their reaction time. The average reaction time to such multiple runs is calculated as a inverse function of the subjects' reaction time. A practice session is afforded before the real test is administered. This takes 5 minutes time. | Baseline, Day 90, Day 180 | |
Secondary | Systolic and diastolic blood pressure (Peer buddy System) | measured by experienced staff following international guidelines. | Baseline, Day 90, Day 180 | |
Secondary | Epworth sleepiness questionnaire ( Peer Buddy System) | A measure of sleepiness. | Baseline, Day 90, Day 180 | |
Secondary | Driving Questionnaire (Usual Care, Peer Buddy System) | Questionnaire regarding driving habits for patients with sleep apnea. If a motor vehicle accident was reported will need to provide documentation. | Baseline, Day 180 | |
Secondary | Body Mass Index (BMI) (Usual Care, Peer Buddy System) | A measure of body fat based on height and weight. | Baseline | |
Secondary | Patient Ratings Survey (Usual Care, Peer Buddy System) | Satisfaction survey of care delivery compared between intervention and usual care. | Day 180 | |
Secondary | Hospital Re-admission (Usual Care, Peer Buddy System) | Monitor hospital re-admission in both intervention and usual care arms. | Baseline, Day 90, Day 180 |
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