Academic Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
BMJ Open. 2022 May 17;12(5):e063505. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-063505.
Long COVID, a new condition whose origins and natural history are not yet fully established, currently affects 1.5 million people in the UK. Most do not have access to specialist long COVID services. We seek to optimise long COVID care both within and outside specialist clinics, including improving access, reducing inequalities, helping self-management and providing guidance and decision support for primary care. We aim to establish a 'gold standard' of care by systematically analysing current practices, iteratively improving pathways and systems of care.
This mixed-methods, multisite study is informed by the principles of applied health services research, quality improvement, co-design, outcome measurement and learning health systems. It was developed in close partnership with patients (whose stated priorities are prompt clinical assessment; evidence-based advice and treatment and help with returning to work and other roles) and with front-line clinicians. Workstreams and tasks to optimise assessment, treatment and monitoring are based in three contrasting settings: workstream 1 (qualitative research, up to 100 participants), specialist management in 10 long COVID clinics across the UK, via a quality improvement collaborative, experience-based co-design and targeted efforts to reduce inequalities of access, return to work and peer support; workstream 2 (quantitative research, up to 5000 participants), patient self-management at home, technology-supported monitoring and validation of condition-specific outcome measures and workstream 3 (quantitative research, up to 5000 participants), generalist management in primary care, harnessing electronic record data to study population phenotypes and develop evidence-based decision support, referral pathways and analysis of costs. Study governance includes an active patient advisory group.
LOng COvid Multidisciplinary consortium Optimising Treatments and servIces acrOss the NHS study is sponsored by the University of Leeds and approved by Yorkshire & The Humber-Bradford Leeds Research Ethics Committee (ref: 21/YH/0276). Participants will provide informed consent. Dissemination plans include academic and lay publications, and partnerships with national and regional policymakers.
NCT05057260, ISRCTN15022307.
长新冠是一种新病症,其起源和自然病史尚未完全确定,目前在英国影响着 150 万人。大多数患者无法获得专科长新冠服务。我们寻求优化专科诊所内外的长新冠护理,包括改善可及性、减少不平等、帮助自我管理以及为初级保健提供指导和决策支持。我们旨在通过系统分析现有实践、迭代改进护理途径和系统,建立“黄金标准”的护理。
这项混合方法、多地点研究基于应用卫生服务研究、质量改进、共同设计、结果测量和学习型卫生系统的原则。它是在与患者(他们的首要任务是进行快速临床评估;提供循证建议和治疗,以及帮助重返工作和其他角色)以及一线临床医生密切合作的基础上制定的。优化评估、治疗和监测的工作流程和任务基于三个截然不同的环境:工作流程 1(定性研究,最多 100 名参与者),在英国 10 家长新冠诊所进行专科管理,通过质量改进合作、基于经验的共同设计以及有针对性地努力减少获得机会、重返工作和同伴支持方面的不平等;工作流程 2(定量研究,最多 5000 名参与者),患者在家中进行自我管理,技术支持监测和验证特定疾病的结果测量;工作流程 3(定量研究,最多 5000 名参与者),在初级保健中进行通科管理,利用电子记录数据研究人群表型并开发基于证据的决策支持、转诊途径和成本分析。研究治理包括一个积极的患者顾问小组。
LOng COvid 多学科联盟优化英国国民保健服务中的治疗和服务研究由利兹大学赞助,并获得约克郡和亨伯-布拉德福德利兹研究伦理委员会批准(编号:21/YH/0276)。参与者将提供知情同意。传播计划包括学术和通俗出版物,以及与国家和地区政策制定者的合作。
NCT05057260,ISRCTN15022307。