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Improving quality of care and long-term health outcomes through continuity of care with the use of an electronic or paper patient-held portable health file (COMMUNICATE): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
- Source :
- Trials
- Publisher :
- Springer Nature
-
Abstract
- The advantages of patient-held portable health files (PHF) and personal health records (PHR), paper or electronic, are said to include improved health-care provider continuity-of-care and patient empowerment in maintaining health. Top-down approaches are favored by public sector government and health managers. Bottom-up approaches include systems developed directly by health-care providers, consumers and industry, implemented locally on devices carried by patient-consumers or shared via web-based portals. These allow individuals to access, manage and share their health information, and that of others for whom they are authorized, in a private, secure and confidential environment. Few medical record technologies have been evaluated in randomized trials to determine whether there are important clinical benefits of these interventions. The COMMUNICATE trial will assess the acceptability and long-term clinical outcomes of an electronic and paper patient-held PHF. This is a 48-month, open-label pragmatic, superiority, parallel-group design randomized controlled trial. Subjects (n=792) will be randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to each of the trial arms: the electronic PHF added to usual care, the paper PHF added to usual care and usual care alone (no PHF). Inclusion criteria include those 60 years or older living independently in the community, but who have two or more chronic medical conditions that require prescription medication and regular care by at least three medical practitioners (general and specialist care). The primary objective is whether use of a PHF compared to usual care reduces a combined endpoint of deaths, overnight hospitalizations and blindly adjudicated serious out-of-hospital events. All primary analyses will be undertaken masked to randomized arm allocation using intention-to-treat principles. Secondary outcomes include quality of life and health literacy improvements. Lack of blinding creates potential for bias in trial conduct and ascertainment of clinical outcomes. Mechanisms are provided to reduce bias, including balanced study contact with all participants, a blinded adjudication committee determining which out-of-hospital events are serious and endpoints that are objective (overnight hospitalizations and mortality). The PRECIS tool provides a summary of the trial’s design on the Pragmatic-Explanatory Continuum. Registered with Clinicaltrials.gov (identifier: NCT01082978 ) on 8 March 2010.
- Subjects :
- Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Time Factors
Health information technology
Medicine (miscellaneous)
Health literacy
Medical decision making
Health informatics
Pragmatic trial
law.invention
Study Protocol
Quality of life (healthcare)
Randomized controlled trial
law
Cause of Death
Medicine
Health services research
Electronic Health Records
Humans
Pharmacology (medical)
Electronic medical records
Quality Indicators, Health Care
business.industry
Medical record
Personal health records
Continuity of Patient Care
Middle Aged
Long-Term Care
Mobile Applications
Quality Improvement
3. Good health
Health Literacy
Intention to Treat Analysis
Hospitalization
Long-term care
Health Records, Personal
Medical informatics
Research Design
Family medicine
Computers, Handheld
Quality of Life
Female
New South Wales
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 17456215
- Volume :
- 16
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Trials
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....60d86d4fc6a8df733a995a518ea608e2
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-015-0760-8