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Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this step-wedge trial is to test the implementation of daily nurse screening for delirium in routine care and its impact on outcomes and complications in hospitalized older adults admitted to 6 general medicine/surgery units at 3 hospitals in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - 1. To test the fidelity, accuracy, and sustainability of implementing daily nurse screening for delirium using the UB-CAM in routine care. - 2. To evaluate the impact of UB-CAM delirium screening on patient and care partner centered outcomes assessed at one month follow-up interviews 3. To evaluate the impact of UB-CAM screening on rates of delirium complications (falls, pressure injury, aspiration) and adverse delirium management (psychoactive medication use, restraint use). Participants (patients) will be assessed for delirium on study days 1, 2 and 3 (or until hospital discharge) and will be asked basic demographics. These patients will be contacted by phone 1 month after enrollment to collect information about inpatient facility use and to administer the Delirium Burden Patient Scale. Participants (care partners) will be interviewed at the patient's discharge to complete the Alzheimer's Disease-8 scale. These care partners will be contacted by phone 1 month after enrollment to complete the Delirium Burden Caregiver Scale and to complete a Qualitative Interview which includes questions about communication and collaboration.


Clinical Trial Description

This study will integrate daily delirium screening using the UB-CAM into routine care for every older adult admitted to 6 acute medical/surgical units at 3 hospitals in 2 states. The investigators will conduct a stepped-wedge implementation design, where UB-CAM screening will be launched at a new unit every 6 months over a 42-month study. The investigators will utilize evidence-based implementation strategies and test fidelity, accuracy, sustainability, and impact using a combination of: 1) electronically captured outcomes measured in all older patients admitted to the study units (administrative sample), 2) research RSDAs coupled with patient and care partner reported outcomes measured in a consented nested sample of older adults on the study units (patient-oriented sample), and 3) qualitative research using focus groups and 1:1 interviews with hospital staff, patients, and family care partners. The investigators propose the following Specific Aims, which will also be assessed in vulnerable subgroups: older adults with AD/ADRD, of underrepresented race/ethnicity, and their care partners. Study Samples and Settings: The study population is hospitalized older adults admitted to 6 general medicine/surgery units at 3 hospitals in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts. There are 2 patient study samples: Patient-Oriented Sample (N=1050) (Aims 1, 2): A sample of patients admitted to the 6 study units will provide informed consent and undergo up to 3 reference standard delirium assessments (RSDAs), which will be used in the Aim 1 accuracy analyses. These patients and their family care partners will also be interviewed by telephone 1 month after hospital discharge to measure outcomes for Aim 2. An average of 1 patient per week per unit will be enrolled, or 25 patients over each 6-month study period. There are 6 units and 7 study periods, yielding a total of 1050 patients. Each patient will contribute at least 1 and up to 3 RSDAs. Based on READI, the investigators anticipate a 25% discharge rate each day, thus day 1 RSDAs will be available on 100% of the sample, day 2 on 75%, and day 3 on 50%, yielding 2362 paired nurse screen-RSDAs for Aim 1. The investigators will take advantage of the large eligible: enroll ratio (at least 10:1) to enrich this population for subgroups of interest. Specifically, The investigators will enroll 300 patients with AD/ADRD, and 250 patients from underrepresented groups, which will enable subset analyses by sex, race/ethnicity, and the presence of AD/ADRD. The investigators do this by preferentially approaching persons with AD/ADRD and/or from minority groups among our eligible patient list. The MPIs used this strategy in READI, which achieved its targets of 35% AD/ADRD and 20% minority representation. Administrative Sample (N=20,000) (Aim 3): This consists of all patients aged 70 and older admitted to the 6 study units throughout the study period. Outcomes for Aim 3 will be obtained from pharmacy data (for antipsychotic use), ICD discharge codes (for aspiration and pressure injury), incident reports (for falls), and hospital orders (for restraint use) via a waiver of informed consent. Based on information provided by our study hospitals (Section 3.3.3), each unit has 25-40 patients (average 30), of which approximately 1/3, or 10, will be aged 70 or older. With average length of stay of 3.5 days, there will be approximately 20 patients aged 70 or older admitted to each study unit each week. This results in 520 patients per unit every 6-month study period, or 21,840 patients over 6 units and 42 months. The investigators conservatively round this number to 20,000 patients. This will provide sufficient sample size to examine rarer outcomes related to both complications and management of delirium. These data will be de-identified and the investigators will not attempt to link it back to the patient-oriented sample. 1. To test the fidelity, accuracy, and sustainability of implementing daily nurse screening for delirium using the UB-CAM in routine care. Hypothesis: Screening will be performed in over 90% of eligible days after launch and remain over 90% throughout the study period. Accuracy will be improved relative to the pre-screening period. Focus groups with hospital staff will identify barriers and facilitators to inform fidelity, sustainability, and future implementation efforts. (Patient-oriented Sample, Staff sample) 2. To evaluate the impact of UB-CAM delirium screening on patient and care partner centered outcomes assessed at one month follow-up interviews. Hypothesis: UB-CAM screening will increase Healthy Days at Home (HDAH), decrease delirium-related distress, and improve perceptions of communication and collaboration relative to the pre-screening period. These same trends will be seen in subgroups of persons with AD/ADRD and underrepresented minorities (Patient-oriented sample). 3. To evaluate the impact of UB-CAM screening on rates of delirium complications (falls, pressure injury, aspiration) and adverse delirium management (psychoactive medication use, restraint use). Hypothesis: UB-CAM screening will reduce delirium-related complications and adverse delirium management, relative to the pre-screening period (Administrative sample). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05915377
Study type Observational
Source Penn State University
Contact Donna M Fick, PhD
Phone 814-574-1716
Email dmf21@psu.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date April 3, 2024
Completion date December 2027

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