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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01603160
Other study ID # Pro00032162
Secondary ID 1R18HS019646-01A
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received April 16, 2012
Last updated March 4, 2015
Start date September 2011
Est. completion date September 2014

Study information

Verified date March 2015
Source Duke University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Institutional Review Board
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

The objective of this study is to design, implement and test quality improvement measures to improve the care of adults with sickle cell disease in the emergency department.


Description:

There is a critical need to consistently provide best practice care for adult patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) who present to emergency departments (EDs). Patients with SCD suffer a shortened lifespan, and often die of many disease associated complications in their 4th and 5th decade of life. These complications include, but are not limited to: stroke, sepsis, pulmonary embolus, acute chest syndrome, and multi-system organ failure. Patients typically present to the ED with severe acute pain that requires rapid analgesic administration, often with high doses of opioids. The perception among many clinicians is that these patients, usually African American, are "drug seeking". This results in delays to administration of analgesics and inferior pain management. Finally, a small proportion of adults with SCD have a large number of visits. A recent study revealed that approximately 25% of adult patients with SCD had more than six ED visits per year with about 10% having more than 23 visits. Several patients had up to 175 visits over a 2-year period. There is also evidence that SCD patients with more than two hospitalizations/year are at an increased risk of death. ED clinicians are often frustrated when they see the same patient for multiple ED visits. This also leads to inadequate analgesic management. These issues highlight the suboptimal effectiveness of the process and systems of ED care for adults with SCD. ED practices for SCD care would significantly benefit from re-design and implementation of innovative best practice management strategies to optimize ED evaluation and management of VOC-related pain and facilitate appropriate referral to a primary care provider.

The ED-SCANS is a validated and reliable decision support tool developed by the principal investigator to help guide ED clinicians in delivering best practice care to adults with SCD. However, optimal integration of the tool within ED systems and process of care and the effect of the tool on both ED system and patient outcomes have not been evaluated. This study is the next logical step in the implementation of the ED-SCANS. The proposed study will use four key decisions of the ED-SCANS (triage, analgesic management, identification of high risk patients, and patient referral for care) as a framework to improve the processes and systems in ED management of adults with SCD. A proactive risk assessment methodology -- Failure Modes, Effects, and Criticality Analysis (FMECA) -- will be used in two EDs to identify the vulnerabilities, risks, and weak points (failures) in the systems and processes involved in four key decisions of the ED-SCANS. Based on the aggregated results of the FMECA's, generalizable quality improvement interventions (QII's) will be developed and implemented with the purpose of changing the way emergency care for adults with SCD is delivered and organized. These re-designed systems and processes (interventions) will be developed to be generalizable to most EDs, with minor modifications. A formal program evaluation will be conducted to determine the barriers and facilitators to implementation of the interventions. Preliminary, hypothesis generating data will be collected for selected outcomes related to each of the four decisions associated with the ED-SCANS. A toolbox of educational materials and electronic medical record prompts for EDs will be developed to facilitate implementation of the ED-SCANS at EDs across the country. This study will therefore focus on (1) developing an optimal implementation strategy using formal risk assessment (FMECA) and quality improvement (PDSA) methods focused on four key decisions of the ED-SCANS: Decision 1: triage, Decision 2: analgesic management, Decision 3: identification of high risk patients, and Decision 7: patient referral for care to improve the processes and systems involved in the care of adults with SCD and (2) conducting a formal program evaluation consisting of a process evaluation (to understand whether the optimal implementation strategy performs as intended (e.g. actual versus planned) through assessment of the barriers and facilitators to the implementation) and an outcomes evaluation of relevant clinical performance indicators, and patient and clinician outcomes. The outcome evaluation is designed to be hypothesis generating, not hypothesis testing. Finally, a toolbox of educational materials and other implementation tools such as decision support tools (e.g., documentation templates) will be developed during the project.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 715
Est. completion date September 2014
Est. primary completion date September 2014
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria for Patient Subjects:

- 18 years and older

- Ability to read and understand English

- Diagnosis of Sickle Cell Disease

Exclusion Criteria for Patient Subjects:

- Diagnosis of Sickle Cell Trait, vs. Disease

Inclusion Criteria for Clinician Subjects:

- Attending or resident physician, or nurse in the Emergency Department

Exclusion Criteria for Clinician Subjects:

Study Design

Time Perspective: Prospective


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Quality Improvement
There are no interventions for the individual patient. The changes in processes developed by the quality improvement team will be made for all adults with sickle cell disease, not just adults who consent to interviews. A proactive risk assessment methodology, Failure Modes, Effects, and Criticality Analysis (FMECA), will be used in two EDs to identify the vulnerabilities, risks, and weak points (failures) in the systems and processes involved in four key decisions of the ED-SCANS. Based on the aggregated results of the FMECA's, generalizable quality improvement interventions (QII's) will be developed and implemented with the purpose of changing the way emergency care for adults with SCD is delivered and organized.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center Winston Salem North Carolina

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Duke University Northwestern University, Wake Forest School of Medicine

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Number of SCD patients meeting high user criteria High user criteria include: No Primary Care Physician, >3 painful episodes per year, >3 ED visits or hospitalizations per year, difficulty getting appointments with PCP. Specific outcome measures include: decrease in the number of ED visits and hospitalizations, as well as improvement in the proportion of physician, social service, and psychiatric service referrals made for high risk/high utilizer patients when indicated. Data will be collected via quarterly medical record reviews (every quarter) and patient interviews (quarters 3-10). 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, and 27 months No
Primary Change in clinical performance indicators and patient and clinician outcome measures This outcome is exploratory and designed to be hypothesis generating. A combination of clinical performance indicators and patient and clinician outcomes will be analyzed, including Triage Score (correct/incorrect), Time to initial analgesic from arrival (minutes from arrival to administration of 1st dose), and patient satisfaction with ED analgesic management. 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, and 27 months No
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