Van Houtven Courtney Harold, Oddone Eugene Z, Hastings Susan N, Hendrix Cristina, Olsen Maren, Neelon Brian, Lindquist Jennifer, Weidenbacher Hollis, Boles Jillian, Chapman Jennifer, Weinberger Morris
Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Durham VA Medical Center, 508 Fulton Street, Durham, NC 27705, USA; Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, 411 W. Chapel Hill Street, NC Mutual Building, Ste 500, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Durham VA Medical Center, 508 Fulton Street, Durham, NC 27705, USA; Division of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, DUMC Box 3003, Durham, NC 27710, USA; Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, Durham VAMC 508 Fulton Street Durham NC 27705, USA; Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development Box 3003 DUMC, Room 3502 Busse Building, Blue Zone, Duke South, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2014 Jul;38(2):260-9. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2014.05.003. Epub 2014 May 14.
Within the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), the largest integrated health care system in the US, approximately 8.5 million Veteran patients receive informal care. Despite a need for training, half of VHA caregivers report that they have not received training that they deemed necessary. Rigorous study is needed to identify effective ways of providing caregivers with the skills they need. This paper describes the Helping Invested Families Improve Veterans' Experience Study (HI-FIVES), an ongoing randomized controlled trial that is evaluating a skills training program designed to support caregivers of cognitively and/or functionally impaired, community-dwelling Veterans who have been referred to receive additional formal home care services. This two-arm randomized controlled trial will enroll a total of 240 caregiver-patient dyads. For caregivers in the HI-FIVES group, weekly individual phone training occurs for 3 weeks, followed by 4 weekly group training sessions, and two additional individual phone training calls. Caregivers in usual care receive information about the VA Caregiver Support Services Program services, including a hotline number. The primary outcome is the number of days a Veteran patient spends at home in the 12 months following randomization (e.g. not in the emergency department, inpatient or nursing home setting). Secondary outcomes include patient VHA health care costs, patient and caregiver satisfaction with VHA health care, and caregiver depressive symptoms. Outcomes from HI-FIVES have the potential to improve our knowledge of how to maximize the ability to maintain patients safely at home for caregivers while preventing poor mental health outcomes among caregivers.
在美国最大的综合医疗保健系统——退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)内,约850万退伍军人患者接受非正式护理。尽管需要培训,但VHA的护理人员中有一半报告称他们没有接受过自己认为必要的培训。需要进行严谨的研究,以确定为护理人员提供所需技能的有效方法。本文介绍了“帮助投入的家庭改善退伍军人体验研究”(HI-FIVES),这是一项正在进行的随机对照试验,正在评估一项技能培训计划,该计划旨在支持那些被转介接受额外正式家庭护理服务、认知和/或功能受损且居住在社区的退伍军人的护理人员。这项双臂随机对照试验将总共招募240对护理人员-患者组合。对于HI-FIVES组的护理人员,每周进行一次为期3周的个人电话培训,随后是4次每周一次的小组培训课程,以及另外两次个人电话培训。接受常规护理的护理人员会收到有关退伍军人事务部护理人员支持服务计划服务的信息,包括热线电话。主要结果是退伍军人患者在随机分组后的12个月内在家中度过的天数(例如,不在急诊科、住院部或疗养院)。次要结果包括患者的VHA医疗保健费用、患者和护理人员对VHA医疗保健的满意度,以及护理人员的抑郁症状。HI-FIVES的结果有可能提高我们对于如何在防止护理人员出现不良心理健康结果的同时,最大程度提高护理人员将患者安全留在家中的能力的认识。