Comparative Effectiveness of Readmission Reduction Interventions for Individuals With Sepsis or Pneumonia (ACCOMPLISH)
Sepsis, Pneumonia, Lower Resp Tract Infection
About this trial
This is an interventional health services research trial for Sepsis
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- UPMC Health Plan members
- Medicare Fee-for-Service enrollees
- Age 21+ -Hospitalized with a primary diagnosis of sepsis or lower respiratory tract infection, --
- Discharged to home, independent living facility, or skilled nursing facility
- Readmission risk is moderate or high
Exclusion Criteria:
- Admitted from hospice;
- Discharged to hospice, inpatient rehabilitation, or a long term acute care facility;
- Known to be pregnant;
- Current enrollment in another remote patient monitoring program;
- Failure of the Callahan 6 item cognitive screen and do not have a proxy to consent;
- No access to a technological device required to participate in remote patient monitoring program;
- Current enrollment in UPMC Advanced Illness Care program;
- Severe, persistent cognitive impairment;
- No documented PCP;
- PCP disapproves of the patient being enrolled in remote patient monitoring;
- Discharged from hospital to skilled nursing facility and stay at the skilled nursing facility for greater than 28 days
Sites / Locations
- UPMC PresbyterianRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Arm 4
Arm 5
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
Structured Telephone Support (STS)
Low-intensity Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) + Standard Response Team (RPM-Low, Standard Team)
High-intensity Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) plus the Standard Team (RPM-High, Standard Team)
Low-intensity Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) + Enhanced Team (RPM-Low, Enhanced Team)
High-intensity Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) plus the Enhanced Team (RPM-High, Enhanced Team)
Post-discharge assessment, education, and medication reconciliation delivered telephonically by a health plan case manager, home care as needed, and follow-up with the primary care provider (PCP) within seven days post-discharge.
Questions are pushed to members patients times per week for up to 90 days post-discharge. Questions are limited to those checking vital signs that indicate worsening of infection. Patient answers to RPM questions trigger High or Medium alerts, which trigger a response by members of the intervention care team. RPM alerts are screened by a nurse-staffed call center. Nurses determine whether emergency care is needed. If not, nurses contact the patient and/or the patients' primary care provider (PCP) or specialist to coordinate care and ensure timely follow-up.
Questions are pushed to patients multiple times per week for up to 90 days post-discharge. Questions include monitoring vital signs for worsening infection but also ask about factors that would indicate worsening of underlying heart or lung conditions, such as weight gain or shortness of breath. Patient answers to RPM questions trigger High or Medium alerts, which trigger a response by members of the intervention care team. RPM alerts are screened by a nurse-staffed call center. Nurses determine whether emergency care is needed. If not, nurses contact the patient and/or the patients' primary care provider (PCP) or specialist to coordinate care and ensure timely follow-up.
Questions are pushed to patients multiple times per week for up to 90 days post-discharge. Questions are limited to those checking vital signs that indicate worsening of infection. Patient answers to RPM questions trigger High or Medium alerts, which trigger a response by members of the intervention care team. RPM alerts are screened by a nurse-staffed call center. Nurses determine whether emergency care is needed. If not, the call center alerts a multidisciplinary care team that is led by a certified registered nurse practitioner (CRNP). CRNPs, who operate in a palliative care role, have prescribing authority and can modify care plans. In addition to reacting to RPM triggers, team members (e.g., CRNP, social workers, nurses) meet with the patient in-person or virtually in the week after discharge and at least twice more in the next 90 days, conduct assessments and a pharmacy review, develop care plans, and discuss advance directives).
Questions are pushed to patients multiple times per week for up to 90 days post-discharge. Questions include monitoring vital signs for worsening infection but also ask about factors that would indicate worsening of underlying heart or lung conditions, such as weight gain or shortness of breath. Patient answers to RPM questions trigger High or Medium alerts, which trigger a response by members of the intervention care team. RPM alerts are screened by a nurse-staffed call center. Nurses determine whether emergency care is needed. If not, the call center alerts a multidisciplinary care team that is led by a certified registered nurse practitioner (CRNP). CRNPs, who operate in a palliative care role, have prescribing authority and can modify care plans.Team members (e.g., CRNP, social workers, nurses) address RPM triggers, meet with the patient three times, pharmacy review, develop care plans, and discuss advance directives).