Evaluation of Nurse-led Integrated Care of Complex Patients Facilitated By Telemonitoring: The SMaRT Study

Last updated: May 24, 2024
Sponsor: University Health Network, Toronto
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Vascular Diseases

Circulation Disorders

Stress

Treatment

Medly

Clinical Study ID

NCT05543720
21-5835
510037
SMaRT Study
  • Ages > 18
  • All Genders

Study Summary

In Canada, 3 out of 4 Canadians aged 65 and older have at least one chronic condition, while 1 in 4 seniors reported having three or more. Caring for complex patients who usually have multiple chronic conditions (MCC) is one of the biggest challenges facing our healthcare system. For patients, the lack of coordination and continuity of care as they transfer between healthcare settings and healthcare providers (HCPs) often results in a higher risk of readmission, suboptimal and fragmented care plans, delays in required medical intervention, inadequate self-care, and confusion on whom they should contact when they have questions. For the patient's care team, they often have no indication how patients are doing between clinic visits unless the patient can provide a log of their home measurements (e.g., blood pressure). Therefore, they are unable to detect and intervene if their patient's health is worsening between visits.

In order to address this increasing need to bridge the current gap in clinical management and self-care of complex patients during their transition from healthcare settings to home care, our team aims to design, implement and evaluate the SMaRT (Safe, Managed, and Responsive Transitions) Clinic, a nurse-led integrated care model facilitated by telemonitoring (TM). Specifically, the SMaRT Clinics aim to meaningfully introduce a nurse (or nurse practitioner) role to improve clinical coordination across patient care teams and reinforce proper self-care education through the use of telemonitoring. This project will be conducted in two phases across four years; Phase I: Design and Development, and Phase II: Implementation and Effectiveness Evaluation. Phase II research activities include enrolling 350 patients with complex chronic conditions in the SMaRT clinics across four study sites. The implementation and effectiveness of the SMaRT clinics will be evaluated through a mix of semi-structured interviews, ethnographic observation, patient questionnaires, and analyses of health utilization outcomes using propensity-matched controls from the ICES provincial database.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. 18 years of age or older

  2. Discharged from hospital or seen within 48 hours of discharge at Health SciencesNorth (HSN), William Osler Health Systems (WOHS), Women's College Hospital (WCH),and Markham Stouffville Hospital (MSH).

  3. Have at least one complex chronic condition (i.e., heart failure, complexobstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), hypertension, diabetes, and/or depression)that would benefit if monitored through telemonitoring.

  4. Able to comply with use of the telemonitoring application and applicable peripheraldevices (e.g., able to stand on the weight scale, able to answer symptom questions,etc.)

  5. Able to read, write and speak English or have a caregiver who is able to do so ontheir behalf.

  6. Patients must have been discharged from hospital within 2 weeks during theirrecruitment into the study (or will be recruited prior to their discharge).

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Patients who are discharged from hospital with the intent to be admitted to along-term care facility will be excluded.

Study Design

Total Participants: 350
Treatment Group(s): 1
Primary Treatment: Medly
Phase:
Study Start date:
October 17, 2022
Estimated Completion Date:
September 30, 2025

Study Description

The overall objective of this study is to design, implement, and evaluate SMaRT Clinics at four hospitals across Ontario serving complex patients transitioning home from the hospital in urban, suburban and rural settings. Instead of developing new technology for the nurse-led SMaRT Clinic, an existing validated TM system that is able to monitor patients with multiple chronic conditions, named Medly, was chosen. Medly was developed at eHealth Innovation (now called the Centre for Digital Therapeutics), UHN and was designed to monitor a medley of chronic conditions, and has been evaluated in trials for single chronic conditions and multiple chronic conditions. For the purposes of this trial, Medly will enable the TM of heart failure, COPD, diabetes, hypertension, and depression.

The patient-facing technology includes the Medly smartphone application (app). The app enables patients to complete symptom surveys and record physiological measures using peripheral devices relevant to their chronic condition (e.g., weight scale, blood pressure monitor, and/or blood glucose monitoring). Designed as a modular app, features and parameters to be monitored can be added and removed, and target values for each parameter (e.g. blood pressure) can be individualized according to the needs of each patient. The inputted measures are processed by an embedded rules-based algorithm (customized to the patient by the setting of target thresholds) which triggers appropriate self-care messages being displayed to the patient within the app (e.g., instructing patients to take their prescribed medication, informing patients to contact their care team, etc.). Other features of the Medly app include the ability to view a historical record of their inputted readings, view graphical trends of blood glucose and blood pressure values, and to assist with adherence, an automated phone call to remind patients if they have not yet taken their readings by the appropriate time for their condition.

The clinician-facing technology includes the Medly dashboard. To support clinical decision-making, clinicians are alerted to clinically significant changes to patient health status and are able to assess alerts generated by the embedded algorithm and review patient data, including which parameters triggered the alert, prescribed medications, graphical trends of lab results and relevant measures, and contact information. Clinicians may also be informed of triggered alerts through email notifications. Information presented on the Medly dashboard may be leveraged to inform clinical decision-making throughout the patient's follow-up care journey.

Connect with a study center

  • William Osler Health System

    Brampton, Ontario
    Canada

    Active - Recruiting

  • Oak Valley Health Hospital

    Markham, Ontario
    Canada

    Active - Recruiting

  • Health Sciences North

    Sudbury, Ontario
    Canada

    Active - Recruiting

  • Women's College Hospital

    Toronto, Ontario
    Canada

    Active - Recruiting

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