Sauers-Ford Hadley S, Tubbs-Cooley Heather, Statile Angela M, Pickler Rita H, White Christine M, Wade-Murphy Susan, Gold Jennifer M, Shah Samir S, Simmons Jeffrey M, Auger Katherine A, Bachus JoAnne, Beck Andrew F, Borell Monica L, Brunswick Stephanie A, Chang Lenisa, Heilman Judy A, Jabour Joseph A, Khoury Jane C, Moore Margo J, Sherman Susan N, Solan Lauren G, Sucharew Heidi J, Sullivan Karen P
Division of Hospital Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Department of Patient Services, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence, Cincinnati, Ohio; The Ohio State University, College of Nursing, Columbus, Ohio; Home Care Services, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; and Division of Infectious Diseases, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Pediatr Qual Saf. 2017 Jan 25;2(1):e012. doi: 10.1097/pq9.0000000000000012. eCollection 2017 Jan-Feb.
The Hospital to Home Outcomes study began with the end goal of evaluating the effectiveness of a single, nurse-led transitional home visit (home visit) program, for acutely ill, pediatric patients, which had been piloted at our institution. As part of the overall study design, building on prior randomized control trials that utilized a run-in period prior to the trial, our study team designed an optimization period to test the home visit and study procedures under real-world conditions.
For this optimization project, there were 3 process improvement goals: to improve the referral process to the home visit, to optimize the home visit content, and to define and operationalize measures of patient- and family-centered outcomes to be used in the subsequent randomized control trial. During the optimization period, a multidisciplinary study team met weekly to review family and stakeholder feedback about the iterative modifications made to the home visit process, content, and outcome measures.
Optimization home visits were completed with 301 families across a variety of discharge diagnoses. The outcomes planned for the clinical trial were tested and refined. Feedback from families and stakeholders indicated that the content changes made to the home visits resulted in increased family knowledge of warning signs to monitor postdischarge. Thirty-one percent of families reported that they altered the care of their child after the home visit.
Through iterative testing, informed by multistakeholder feedback, we leveraged patient and family engagement to maximize the effectiveness and generalizability of the home visit intervention.
“医院到家结局”研究始于评估一项由护士主导的针对急症儿科患者的单一过渡性家访计划的有效性这一最终目标,该计划已在我们机构进行了试点。作为总体研究设计的一部分,基于之前在试验前使用导入期的随机对照试验,我们的研究团队设计了一个优化期,以在现实条件下测试家访和研究程序。
对于这个优化项目,有3个过程改进目标:改进家访的转诊流程,优化家访内容,以及定义并实施以患者和家庭为中心的结局指标,用于后续的随机对照试验。在优化期内,一个多学科研究团队每周开会,审查家庭和利益相关者对家访过程、内容和结局指标的迭代修改的反馈。
完成了对301个家庭的优化家访,涵盖各种出院诊断。对临床试验计划的结局进行了测试和完善。家庭和利益相关者的反馈表明,对家访内容的改变使家庭对出院后需监测的警示信号的了解有所增加。31%的家庭报告说,他们在接受家访后改变了对孩子的护理方式。
通过多利益相关者反馈指导下的迭代测试,我们利用患者和家庭的参与来最大限度地提高家访干预的有效性和普遍性。