Department of General Practice, HRB Centre for Primary Care Research, Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin, Ireland
Department of General Practice, HRB Centre for Primary Care Research, Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin, Ireland.
BMJ Open. 2021 Feb 1;11(2):e041809. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-041809.
Link workers are non-health or social care professionals based in primary care who support people to develop and achieve a personalised set of health and social goals by engaging with community resources. Link workers have been piloted in areas of deprivation, but there remains insufficient evidence to support their effectiveness. Multimorbidity is increasing in prevalence, but there are limited evidence-based interventions. This paper presents the protocol for a randomised controlled trial (RCT) that will test the effectiveness of link workers based in general practices in deprived areas in improving health outcomes for people with multimorbidity.
The protocol presents the proposed pragmatic RCT, involving 10 general practitioner (GP) practices and 600 patients. Eligible participants will be community dwelling adults with multimorbidity (≥two chronic conditions) identified as being suitable for referral to a practice-based link worker. Following baseline data collection, the patients will be randomised into intervention group that will meet the link worker over a1-month period, or a 'wait list' control that will receive usual GP care. Primary outcomes are health-related quality of life as assessed by EQ-5D-5L and mental health assessed by Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Secondary outcomes are based on the core outcome set for multimorbidity. Data will be collected at baseline and on intervention completion at 1 month using questionnaires self-completed by participants and GP records. Parallel process and economic analyses will be conducted to explore participants' experiences and examine cost-effectiveness of the link worker intervention.
Ethical approval has been granted by the Irish College of General Practitioners Ethics Committee. The findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals.
ISRCTN10287737;Pre-results.
联络工作者是非医疗或社会保健专业人员,他们立足于基层医疗保健,通过与社区资源互动,支持人们制定和实现个性化的健康和社会目标。联络工作者已在贫困地区进行试点,但仍缺乏充分的证据支持其有效性。多种疾病的患病率正在增加,但基于证据的干预措施有限。本文介绍了一项随机对照试验(RCT)的方案,该试验将测试在贫困地区的基层医疗保健中设立的联络工作者在改善多种疾病患者的健康结果方面的有效性。
该方案提出了一项实用的 RCT 方案,涉及 10 家全科医生(GP)实践和 600 名患者。符合条件的参与者将是居住在社区、患有多种疾病(≥两种慢性疾病)的成年人,他们被认为适合转介给以实践为基础的联络工作者。在基线数据收集后,患者将被随机分为干预组,该组将在 1 个月内与联络工作者会面,或对照组(等待名单),该组将接受常规的全科医生护理。主要结果是通过 EQ-5D-5L 评估的健康相关生活质量和通过医院焦虑和抑郁量表评估的心理健康。次要结果基于多种疾病的核心结局集。数据将在基线和干预完成时(1 个月)通过参与者自我完成的问卷和全科医生记录进行收集。将进行平行过程和经济分析,以探索参与者的经验并检查联络工作者干预的成本效益。
爱尔兰全科医生伦理委员会已批准该研究的伦理。研究结果将在同行评议的期刊上发表。
ISRCTN81140434;预结果。