Hospital-at-home models seek to address the impending shortage of hospital beds by reimagining the way we deliver acute hospital-level care - substituting the ward for a patient's home. Such programmes have been well established in other countries such as Australia, Europe and USA to be a less costly way to provide inpatient care as a result of a reduction of fixed costs of building and running hospitals, with equivalent variable costs and comparable clinical outcomes. Acute services are provided at home, including regular visits by doctors, nurses and therapists, intravenous therapy, simple investigations and 24/7 access to doctors. The clinical service is tech-enabled, by remote monitoring and telecommunication technologies.
Although overseas experience suggests that hospital-at-home programmes are an effective, safe and scalable substitute for inpatient beds, and promising strategy to meet the bed demands of our ageing population, the outcomes in the local environment is unclear. Singapore has a unique healthcare system compared to primarily insurance driven (USA) or publicly funded (UK and Australia), which favours subsidies of inpatient care compared to community-based care. In addition, cultural beliefs of hospitals as a source of comfort and healing and unfamiliarity with healthcare providers performing home visits may provide unique challenges which may affect outcomes of a hospital-at-home programme in Singapore. In an Asian setting, family and informal caregivers are heavily involved in the care of patients and may pose unique barriers and facilitators to such care at home that may not be evident in similar models in Western countries.
This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness, feasibility and processes of a new hospital-at-home programme in Singapore.
We hypothesise that hospital-at-home programmes may reduce cost of delivering care with comparable clinical outcomes (readmissions, mortality, and hospital-acquired complications) and positive patient and staff experiences.
2. Specific Aims
The primary objective of this study is:
The secondary objectives in this study are:
Further exploratory objectives include:
3.1 Setting
We study will recruit 147 patients in the intervention group and 147 patients in the control group from 2 sites: National University Hospital (NUH) and Alexandra Hospital (AH). Patients will be recruited from both AH and NUH with no restrictions of proportion from each center. There are no restrictions based on race of the subject. We will exclude children as this is an adult medical service.
3.2 Recruitment
3.2.1 Recruitment Process
Study personnel will screen through the electronic health record of all patients newly admitted overnight every working weekday in the following settings:
Patients thought to be suitable by the research assistant will be confirmed by the NUHS@Home consultant for clinical criteria, who will subsequently discuss with the primary physician regarding eligibility.
Patients who are subsequently enrolled into the NUHS@Home programme will be approached for consent to be in the hospital-at-home cohort. The NUHS@Home team will be activated. Patients will be sent home via ambulance, where they will be reviewed by a NUHS@Home nurse. Intravenous therapies, pillboxes for medication, remote monitoring software, and telecommunication tools will be set up as indicated. NUHS@Home doctors will visit at least once daily, and nurses at least twice daily as required. Therapists will conduct home visits as necessary. The NUHS@Home team is available 24/7. When conventional discharge criteria are met, the patient will be discharged. The NUHS@Home clinical team will be under clinical governance of Division of Advanced Internal Medicine at NUH and patients will be considered 'inpatients' throughout the treatment period.
Patients who are suitable for NUHS@Home programme but the programme has no bed capacity will be approached for consent to be in the control cohort. There will be no change to the patient's clinical management.
Patients who were offered but declined enrolments inot the NUHS@Home programme will be approached for consent to be in the rejected cohort. There will be no change to the patient's clinical management.
3.2.2 Consent
If the patient has capacity, the study team will go through the study information with the patient and caregiver (which will cover the process for recruitment and the randomisation process) and take written informed consent. If the patient requests, their main spokespersons will be involved in the discussion. If the patient has no capacity to consent, the main spokesperson will represent them in this scenario.
3.3 Inclusion and exclusion criteria are entered elsewhere in this protocol
3.4 Withdrawal Criteria
Patients may discontinue the intervention if they are transferred back to hospital during the treatment period.
3.5 Subject Replacement
Subjects who drop out will not be replaced.
4 Methods and Assessments
4.1 Study Visits
4.2.1 Screening Encounter
Patients which are potentially eligible would be screened both using the electronic health record and in person using a screening checklist to confirm eligibility.
4.2.2 Study Visits
Patients or their proxies who consent will undergo a baseline questionnaire. This includes baseline demographics, Barthel's score, assessment of health literacy, mini-COG, EQ-5D-5L and EQ-VAS. If a proxy is used, the same proxy will need to complete all subsequent questionnaires.
4.2.3 Final Study Visits
Patients will undergo a final questionnaire 14 days from enrolment. If a proxy was used for initial questionnaires, the same proxy will be used to complete the final questionnaire. This includes EQ-5D-5L, EQ-VAS, perception of care transitions and patient satisfaction survey. The visit will either be done in the clinic (if patients are coming for a clinic appointment) or over a phone call. Patients and caregivers in the intervention group will undergo an additional survey.
Patients in the 'rejected cohort' will not undergo this questionnaire.
4.2.4 Post Study Follow up and Procedures
30 days from discharge, the study team will collect patient outcomes from all 3 cohorts from the electronic medical record. Every 3 months, the study team will extract billing data for a list of itemised consumables and their associated cost to the patient. Patients will not be involved in this data collection.
5 Measurements
5.1 Primary and secondary outcomes are detailed elsewhere in this protocol
5.2 Baseline Characteristics
The following baseline characteristics will be measured at enrolment:
5.4 Process Evaluation
5.4.1 Process Measures
The following processes will also be measured in both groups from chart review:
5.4.2 Disease specific quality indicators
Disease specific quality indicators will be measured for the common diagnoses that the investigators anticipate, and where established quality indicators exist.
5.4.3 Intervention-specific Process Measures
The following processes will also be measured to examine fidelity of the programme:
5.4.4 Stakeholder Perspectives Using a Qualitative Approach
Patients who are eligible and enrolled into the NUHS@Home Programme will be recruited for this study. They will also be asked if their family member/caregiver (excluding hired domestic help) might be interested to participate in the in-depth semi-structured interviews.
Study Design
The focused ethnography approach is adopted to elicit situated experiences of patients receiving care at home and the perceptions of caregivers and care providers in regard to facilitators and barriers to this new care model. Participant observations of care practices at home and interviews with the three parties including patients, caregivers and the staff will be undertaken. Analysis will be conducted using constant comparison technique to compare incidents applicable to each theme.
Observations will be carried out at participants' home by adopting 'observer as participant' role (Gold, 1958), where observations will be favored over participation. Interview guide will be adopted from the initial qualitative interviews and will focus on the following areas: Patients experiences of receiving the care at home: Caregivers and staff's perceptions of providing the care at home; Facilitators and barriers of receiving/providing care via HaH model and specific questions in regard to the rich points of social interaction observed in the field.
The following themes will be explored from the patient and their caregivers:
Interviews will be audio-recorded and will last approximately 30-60 minutes. The interviews will focus on understanding the experiences of patients, caregivers and care providers on their perceptions of the HaH intervention program.
The total number of interviews required will depend on data saturation, estimated to involve 20-30 patients and 20-30 caregivers.
Condition | Hospital-at-home, Hospital-at-home |
---|---|
Treatment | Hospital-at-home, Hospital-at-home, Usual in-hospital care |
Clinical Study Identifier | NCT04330378 |
Sponsor | National University Health System, Singapore |
Last Modified on | 16 April 2021 |
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