Agarwal Gina, Pirrie Melissa, McLeod Brent, Angeles Ricardo, Tavares Walter, Marzanek Francine, Thabane Lehana
Department of Family Medicine, McMaster University, 100 Main Street W, Hamilton, ON, L8P 1H6, Canada.
Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON, L8S 4L8, Canada.
Trials. 2019 Jan 23;20(1):75. doi: 10.1186/s13063-018-3107-4.
Frequent users of emergency medical services for issues that could be more appropriately managed through non-urgent care deplete the limited resources of the health-care system. Community paramedicine is an emerging field that extends the role of paramedics beyond the traditional emergency response. The goal of the current study is to evaluate the impact of a community paramedicine home-visit intervention with frequent users on reducing ambulance calls, hospital visits, and admissions. The study will also provide a cross-sectional description of the characteristics of frequent users of emergency medical services.
METHODS/DESIGN: An open-label, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial with parallel intervention and control groups will be conducted in four paramedic services in Ontario. The sample size has been calculated as 261 per group for a 25% reduction in ambulance calls. Eligible participants will be frequent callers (three or more calls in 6 months), individuals who call for at least one lift assist, or individuals referred to the program by a paramedic. Individuals will be randomly allocated to receive either the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program intervention or their usual care (control). Intervention participants will receive up to three visits from a community paramedic, who will conduct health risk assessments, provide health promotion and education, provide referrals to local resources, and fax reports back to the family physician. Data will be collected from administrative databases (e.g., paramedic services), a custom CP@home program database, participant surveys, and key informant interviews. An intention-to-treat analysis will be conducted, including descriptive statistics and multi-level modeling to find factors predictive of primary and secondary outcomes. A thematic analysis will be used to analyze the qualitative outcomes. An economic analysis will consider the cost-effectiveness of the program.
CP@home has the potential to reduce the health-care system burden significantly by targeting current frequent users of emergency medical services. By targeting this population, CP@home aims to decrease ambulance calls and emergency department visits, reducing health-care costs and improving the quality of life of a vulnerable population. If successful, CP@home will inform the development of community paramedicine policies and the expanding role of paramedics in regions across Canada.
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02835989 . Registered on July 14 2016.
对于那些可通过非紧急护理更妥善处理的问题,频繁使用紧急医疗服务的人群消耗了医疗保健系统有限的资源。社区护理是一个新兴领域,它将护理人员的角色扩展到传统的应急响应之外。本研究的目的是评估针对频繁使用者的社区护理家访干预对减少救护车呼叫、医院就诊和住院的影响。该研究还将对紧急医疗服务频繁使用者的特征进行横断面描述。
方法/设计:将在安大略省的四个护理服务机构中进行一项开放标签、实用、随机对照试验,设有平行的干预组和对照组。为使救护车呼叫减少25%,每组样本量计算为261人。符合条件的参与者将是频繁呼叫者(6个月内呼叫三次或更多次)、至少呼叫一次抬升协助的个人,或由护理人员转介至该项目的个人。参与者将被随机分配接受家庭社区护理(CP@home)项目干预或其常规护理(对照组)。干预参与者将接受社区护理人员最多三次家访,护理人员将进行健康风险评估、提供健康促进和教育、提供当地资源转介服务,并将报告传真给家庭医生。数据将从行政数据库(如护理服务机构)、定制的CP@home项目数据库、参与者调查和关键 informant 访谈中收集。将进行意向性分析,包括描述性统计和多层次建模,以找出预测主要和次要结果的因素。将使用主题分析来分析定性结果。经济分析将考虑该项目的成本效益。
CP@home有潜力通过针对当前紧急医疗服务的频繁使用者来显著减轻医疗保健系统的负担。通过针对这一人群,CP@home旨在减少救护车呼叫和急诊就诊次数,降低医疗保健成本,并改善弱势群体的生活质量。如果成功,CP@home将为社区护理政策的制定以及护理人员在加拿大各地区不断扩大的作用提供参考。
ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT02835989。于2016年7月14日注册。