Pilot Study to Improve Care Coordination
Chronic IllnessThe purpose of this study is 1) to learn how VA patients can help share their health information between their VA providers and providers outside the VA and 2) if sharing this information is useful to providers and improves care received.
Incorporating Patient Capacity Into the Clinical Landscape
Chronic DiseaseThis study is designed to answer why "patient capacity" (i.e. patient available abilities and resources to enact self-care and access healthcare) is not regularly documented in the Electronic Medical Record (EMR) in a way that is useful for clinicians. Through the implementation of communication tools designed for patient capacity assessment and engagement of stakeholders in a process of user-centered design, the study team hypothesizes that the study can help clinicians elicit this information in conversation and regularly document it in the medical record for future healthcare discussions.
Health Related Quality of Life in Children With Food Allergy: Comparison to Controls and Other Chronic...
Children With Food AllergyThe number of studies concerning health related quality of life (HRQL) in children with food allergy is very limited. Only one study to date has compared HRQL of a group of children with food allergy to data published on general population and other chronic diseases. This study concluded to lowest HRQL scores in food allergic children compared to type 1 diabetes mellitus with important impact on scores concerning social activities.
Couples Coping With Multiple Chronic Medical Conditions
Chronic DiseaseIllness BehaviorHandling of complex health situations (as defined by multimorbidity) in partnership: communication between romantic partners; subjective illness perception; coping with stressful experiences due to multimorbidity. Intervention : Expressive Writing about subjective illness perception vs. Writing about individual Time-Management Primary Endpoint: subjective Health (e.g. SF 12 questionnaire) Secondary Endpoints: Psychosocial Adjustments (Depression, somatic symptoms, quality of partnership and others)
Improving Care for Children With Complex Needs
Medically Complex ChildrenCare Coordination18 moreSeattle Children's Hospital (SCH), in collaboration with several health plans and Washington State Department of Social and Health Services developed the Comprehensive Case Management (CCM) program with the goal to reduce costs of care for medically complex children cared for at SCH as well as improve their health status and the quality of care they receive. The CCM program aims to develop and facilitate a reliable and standardized process that empowers the child's primary care provider and provides him/her with the resources s/he needs to avoid unnecessary emergency department visits and admissions. Our study will include children who had a hospitalization or emergency department visit at Seattle Children's between 2009-2012 and, at that time, had multiple active chronic medical issues but had no specialty service at Seattle Children's to help their primary care providers manage them.
Quality of Life in Patients With Chronic Disease
Chronic DiseaseQuality of Life4 moreTo improve HRQoL in patients with chronic diseases, a comprehensive understanding of the association between HRQoL and chronic diseases is vital. Therefore, the aim of the study is to provide a profound insight in HRQoL outcomes and its determinants in chronically ill patients, with a focus on multimorbidity and socio-economic status in a primary care setting.
Tablet-Enabled Video Telehealth to Enhance Veterans' Access and Care
Chronic DiseaseMental IllnessIn order to enhance access to clinical and mental health services for Veterans who have geographic, clinical, or social barriers to in-person care, VA Offices of Connected Care and Rural Health began distributing 5,000 tablets to Veterans with access barriers in 2016. The objective of this Quality Improvement evaluation is to: Understand characteristics of Veterans who received tablets, the frequency and ways in which they used the tablets, and the effects of tablet use on access to VA services. Through a survey of Veterans, evaluate patient experiences using the tablets, and determine how tablets influenced patients' experiences with VA care, including their satisfaction, communication with providers, and access to needed services. Identify implementation barriers and facilitators to tablet distribution and use through interviews with clinicians and staff in a purposive sample of VA facilities Evaluate the effects of tablet use on chronic medical condition outcomes (e.g., hypertension, diabetes) and mental health treatment initiation and engagement (e.g., for depression, PTSD, and substance use).
Evaluating the Navajo Community Outreach and Patient Empowerment (COPE) Program
Diabetes MellitusMetabolic Syndrome2 moreSince 2009, a programmatic community-based strategy (COPE) has been implemented to address health disparities among Navajo individuals living with multiple chronic conditions. COPE (Community Outreach and Patient Empowerment) targets individual, family, and health system-level factors through four activities: 1) coordination between community health representatives (CHRs) and Indian Health Service providers; 2) CHR competency with standardized training; 3) a culturally-sensitive health promotion curriculum for patients and families; and 4) strong CHR supervision. COPE has been implemented throughout Navajo Nation. Enrollment is programmatic; in other words, the decision to enroll a patient in COPE occurs independently of whether the patient is in this study. Participants receive the COPE intervention in the same manner and intensity, whether they are included in this observational study or not. The main goal of this observational research is to understand if COPE improves the lives of participating community members. The Primary Aim is to assess the impact of the COPE Project on changes in HbA1c and other CVD risk factors. Hypothesis: Patients enrolled in the COPE program will experience a reduction in HbA1c compared to the control group. Secondary aims are: 1) To understand if COPE improves patients' own self-reported outcomes. Hypothesis: COPE patients will report better health compared with their own baseline at 12 months. 2) To Identify factors associated with increased effectiveness of the COPE Project at the individual, community, and health system level using a mixed-model approach. 3) To understand diverse stakeholder perspectives on COPE impact and value among CHRs, providers and the health care system. Hypothesis: Compared with baseline, CHRs will report greater empowerment in their work, providers will report greater confidence in CHRs. The observational cohort will be comprised of individuals with diabetes receiving care at one of the participating health facilities. Cases include individuals participating in the COPE intervention; controls are non-COPE participants identified within the same hospital and matched based on similar baseline characteristics. Study findings will improve clinical and patient-decision making and the health of marginalized AI/ANs by informing policies to promote CHR interventions in rural and underserved communities.
Development of Scalable New Model(s) Focused on Care Co-ordination and Care Provision for Medically...
Heart FailureThe goal is to define a set of clinical pathways for heart failure patients, reflecting the period from prior to admission to the post-discharge period following hospitalisation, under the current system that exists at the two clinical sites [as mentioned previously, the main site is at St Vincent's University Hospital in Dublin, but to ensure generalizability the project team will also carry out similar work Portsmouth Hospital, United Kingdom]. These pathways have been drawn up using the experience of the clinical investigators, using an interactive workshop approach and a pilot study. Pre-Admission Pathway Emergency Department Pathway In-Hospital management Pathway Pre-discharge Pathway Post-Discharge Pathway During identification of these pathways, the research team identified the settings/personnel that require study to more fully comprehend the methods, strengths and weaknesses of the present processes. Study activities are focused on two aspects of the patient journey, immediately before discharge and three months post discharge during the outpatient phase.
CloudConnect: Predictive And Retrospective Clinical Decision Support For Chronic Disease Management...
Type 1 Diabetes MellitusThis study is to assess an approach of self-management called CloudConnect, evaluating the impact of CloudConnect Reports on patient engagement, adolescent/parent discussion, and clinical outcomes in adolescent Type 1 Diabetes (T1D).