MedPath

Multimorbidity Management Supported by a Digital Platform

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Chronic Disease
Interventions
Device: METHIS Platform
Other: Goal-Oriented Care Training Program
Registration Number
NCT05593835
Lead Sponsor
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Brief Summary

This study aims to assess whether the use of the METHIS digital platform using a patient-centered approach contributes to an improvement in the quality of life, mental health and physical activity of patients with multimorbidity followed up in Primary Health Care. Practices will be randomly allocated between: providing access to consultations through the METHIS platform (intervention) or following patients by the traditional method (control). They will complete questionnaires on quality of life, mental health and report the number of steps taken, at the beginning and end of the study.

Detailed Description

A superiority, cluster randomised trial will be conducted at Primary Health Care Practices (1:1 allocation ratio). All public practices in the Lisbon and Tagus Valley Region, Portugal, not involved in a previous pilot trial, will be eligible. The intervention combines a training programme and a customised Information System (METHIS). Both are designed to help clinicians to adopt a Goal-Oriented Care Model approach and to encourage patients and carers to play a more active role in autonomous healthcare.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1380
Inclusion Criteria
  • community-dwelling people
  • aged 50 or older
  • with complex multimorbidity (co-occurrence of three or more chronic conditions affecting three or more different body systems)
  • with access to an Internet connection and a communication technology device
Exclusion Criteria
  • inability to: provide informed consent, to read or write, inability to access an email or electronic device, even when helped by an informal caregiver

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
METHIS InterventionGoal-Oriented Care Training ProgramThe METHIS intervention will consist of two components. The first component is a Goal-Oriented Care (GOC) Training Program for health professionals. The training program will include the concept of personalised care, methods of goal elation, implications of GOC in healthcare practice, and how METHIS platform can be used to support the application of GOC. The training will be implemented through a blended-learning, continuous education program that will be credited by Nova University of Lisbon. The second component is a GOC information system. This will be the digital platform METHIS, which will be designed to nudge clinicians to adopt a GOC and to encourage patients and caregivers to take an active role in healthcare. The investigators will adapt an existing platform that was developed for a pilot study during the COVID-19 pandemic, that promotes care coordination, optimises disease prioritisation, and patient self-management.
METHIS InterventionMETHIS PlatformThe METHIS intervention will consist of two components. The first component is a Goal-Oriented Care (GOC) Training Program for health professionals. The training program will include the concept of personalised care, methods of goal elation, implications of GOC in healthcare practice, and how METHIS platform can be used to support the application of GOC. The training will be implemented through a blended-learning, continuous education program that will be credited by Nova University of Lisbon. The second component is a GOC information system. This will be the digital platform METHIS, which will be designed to nudge clinicians to adopt a GOC and to encourage patients and caregivers to take an active role in healthcare. The investigators will adapt an existing platform that was developed for a pilot study during the COVID-19 pandemic, that promotes care coordination, optimises disease prioritisation, and patient self-management.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Health related quality of lifeParticipants will be asked to fill in the SF-12 questionnaire at baseline and at 12 months.

Participants will be asked to fill in the SF-12 questionnaire which generates a physical component score (PCS) and a mental component score (MCS). The primary outcome will be the mean difference in the variation (delta) of the PCS of SF-12 between baseline and 12 months. The SF-12 can be filled in 2-4 minutes, and it is validated for the Portuguese population. Minimum important differences validated across large populations and multiple disease categories are a change in between 2 and 3 points from the population mean of 50.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Physical activityParticipants will wear the SmartBand for 12 months.

Physical activity will be monitored through the number of steps walked daily. To assess the number of steps per day, a smart band with a triaxial Accelerometer will be used in both arms of the trial. Although traditional step counters use pedometers to detect daily step counts, accelerometers are more accurate and sensitive to lower force accelerations (e.g., slow walking) being considered the current standard for collecting physical activity data. Sedentary older adults and individuals living with disability and chronic illness benefit from a physically active lifestyle, with approximately 4,600- 5,500 daily steps. The lowest median values for steps/day found is in disabled older adults (1214 steps/day) and by people living with COPD (2237 steps/day).

Number of serious adverse events (clinician-reported)Family physicians will be asked, at 6 and 12 months after randomization, to check the life status of enrolled patients and whether patients in the trial were admitted to a hospital or had a visit to an emergency service since the randomization date.

These will be the safety outcomes chosen for this trial. In both trial arms, data about patient mortality will be collected and combined with data on occurrence of emergency department visits and hospital admissions as a proxy for serious adverse events. This information is available through the Portuguese common EHR. Due to legal requirements, after death, the information about hospital admissions and other contacts with healthcare organisations ceases to be available to the attending physician.

Mental health statusParticipants will complete the HADS-A and HADS-D questionnaire at baseline and at 12 months.

Participants will be asked to complete the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale questionnaire (HADS-A and HADS-D, respectively). The investigators will calculate the mean difference in the variation (delta) in HADS-A and HADS-D between baseline and 12 months. Although HADS was designed for inpatients it was posteriorly validated in the primary care outpatient setting. A minimum important difference of 1.5 has been reported in other chronic disorders.

Number of potentially missed diagnoses (clinician-reported)Potentially missed diagnoses will be reported 6 months after the intervention phase. In this way a compromise between avoiding recall bias and allowing enough time for a missed diagnosis to become clinically apparent is achieved.

These will be a second safety outcome. The investigators will ask clinicians in the intervention arm if they are aware of any serious diagnosis that might have been missed due to the intervention.

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