Boyd Cynthia M, Shadmi Efrat, Conwell Leslie Jackson, Griswold Michael, Leff Bruce, Brager Rosemarie, Sylvia Martha, Boult Chad
Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2008 May;23(5):536-42. doi: 10.1007/s11606-008-0529-9. Epub 2008 Feb 12.
Improving health care of multimorbid older adults is a critical public health challenge. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effect of a pilot intervention to enhance the quality of primary care experiences for chronically ill older persons (Guided Care).
Nonrandomized prospective clinical trial.
PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: Older, chronically ill, community-dwelling patients (N = 150) of 4 General Internists in 1 urban community practice setting who were members of a capitated health plan and identified as being at high risk of heavy use of health services in the coming year by claims-based predictive modeling.
Guided Care, an enhancement to primary care that incorporates the operative principles of chronic care innovations, was delivered by a specially trained, practice-based registered nurse working closely with 2 primary care physicians. Each patient received a geriatric assessment, a comprehensive care plan, evidence-based primary care with proactive follow-up of chronic conditions, coordination of the efforts of health professionals across all health care settings, and facilitated access to community resources.
Quality of primary care experiences (physician-patient communication, interpersonal treatment, knowledge of patient, integration of care, and trust in physician) was assessed using the Primary Care Assessment Survey (PCAS) at baseline and 6 months later. At baseline, the patients assigned to receive Guided Care were similar to those assigned to receive usual care in their demographics and disability levels, but they had higher risk scores and were less likely to be married. Thirty-one of the 75 subjects assigned to the Guided Care group received the intervention. At 6 months, intention-to-treat analyses adjusting for age, gender, and risk score suggest that Guided Care may improve the quality of physician-patient communication. In per-protocol analyses, receipt of Guided Care was associated with more favorable change than usual care from baseline to follow-up in all 5 PCAS domains, but only physician-patient communication showed a statistically significant improvement.
In this pilot study, Guided Care appeared to improve the quality of primary care experiences for high-risk, chronically ill older adults. A larger cluster-randomized controlled trial of Guided Care is underway.
改善患有多种疾病的老年人的医疗保健是一项关键的公共卫生挑战。本研究的目的是评估一项试点干预措施对提高慢性病老年人初级保健体验质量(引导式护理)的效果。
非随机前瞻性临床试验。
患者/参与者:来自1个城市社区医疗机构的4名普通内科医生的老年慢性病社区居住患者(N = 150),他们是按人头付费的健康计划成员,并通过基于索赔的预测模型被确定为下一年度医疗服务高使用风险人群。
引导式护理是对初级保健的一种强化,它纳入了慢性病创新的操作原则,由一名经过专门培训、基于实践的注册护士与2名初级保健医生密切合作实施。每位患者都接受了老年评估、综合护理计划、基于证据的初级保健以及对慢性病的积极随访、协调所有医疗保健机构的卫生专业人员的工作,并便利获取社区资源。
在基线和6个月后使用初级保健评估调查(PCAS)评估初级保健体验质量(医患沟通、人际治疗、对患者的了解、护理整合以及对医生的信任)。在基线时,被分配接受引导式护理的患者在人口统计学和残疾水平方面与被分配接受常规护理的患者相似,但他们的风险评分更高,结婚的可能性更小。被分配到引导式护理组的75名受试者中有31名接受了干预。在6个月时,对年龄、性别和风险评分进行调整的意向性分析表明,引导式护理可能会改善医患沟通质量。在符合方案分析中,从基线到随访,接受引导式护理与在所有5个PCAS领域中比常规护理更有利的变化相关,但只有医患沟通显示出统计学上的显著改善。
在这项试点研究中,引导式护理似乎提高了高危慢性病老年人的初级保健体验质量。一项更大规模的引导式护理整群随机对照试验正在进行中。