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Portable Health Files Improve Quality of Care and Health Outcomes: a Randomized Controlled Trial

Not Applicable
Conditions
Electronic Medical Record
Chronic Medical Conditions
Personal Health Records
Interventions
Device: Electronic (USB) Portable Health File
Device: Paper Portable Health File
Registration Number
NCT01082978
Lead Sponsor
St George Hospital, Australia
Brief Summary

The PHF trial will assess the acceptability and long term outcomes resulting from the usage of electronic (carried by the patient on a USB memory device) and paper portable health files in a population with high intensity use of medical services. The rationale is that use of the portable health files provides a conduit of direct communication among health care providers of a patient's important health care information and this leads to better care and patient outcomes.

Primary hypothesis: Addition of a patient-held portable health file (PHF) to usual care improves patient outcome and quality-of-life compared to usual care alone.

Secondary hypothesis: Addition of patient-held portable health file (PHF) to usual care is acceptable and satisfactory to patients and their health care providers.

Detailed Description

A common problem faced by patients and clinicians in our health system is continuity of care and 'clinical handovers'. Few medical record technologies, paper or electronic, top down or bottom up, have been evaluated in a randomised clinical outcome trial to determine the clinical benefits and costs of 'shared' medical and health information. Furthermore, although there are many studies that have evaluated processes of care only a minority do so within a randomized design. Given that any difference is, possibly, small to moderate in magnitude, and given confounders, the use of a randomisation is an essential design requirement.

The first 12 months of the trial constitutes Stage 1 whose primary objective is to describe the acceptability and satisfaction of the our Portable Health Files, and other key process measures. The subsequent 36 months constitutes Stage 2 whose primary objective it to compare important clinical outcomes. The assigned treatment (i.e., the e-PHF or p-PHF) will be used for 4 years total.

To take into account a probable lag effect of the interventions, patients will also be followed for an additional 3 years beyond the conclusion of the randomised trial to see if there are any longer-term effects.

The trial is un-blinded so there will be a potential for bias in trial conduct and a potential for ascertainment bias in the determination of important clinical outcomes and quality-of-life. To reduce clinical outcome ascertainment bias a blinded Adjudication Committee will make the determination which out-of-hospital events are "serious". The other primary outcomes: mortality and all overnight hospitalizations are objective outcomes and are not subject to ascertainment bias.

Secondary outcomes include quality of life, quality measures uptake, investigations, medication use, medication errors, and adverse drug reactions. Utilities and costs will also be collected for cost-effectiveness analysis. Patient and provider acceptability and satisfaction with the PHFs will be also collected.

All primary analyses will be undertaken masked to randomized arm allocation.

Most secondary analyses including quality of life, quality measures uptake, investigations, medication use, medication errors, and adverse drug reactions, health utilities, health care utilisation and health care costs will also be undertaken masked to randomized arm allocation.

This Adjudication Committee will also monitor trial safety and scientific integrity.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
382
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Subjects must be of age 60 or greater

  2. Patients living independently in the community. Hostel care is acceptable, but patients that are not independent requiring full nursing home care are excluded.

  3. Subjects must have had six medical practitioner visits in the previous 12 months

  4. Subjects must have at least two of the following confirmed chronic diseases that require prescription oral or parenteral drug treatment or surgery and requiring at least annual specialist consultation: cardiovascular, respiratory, endocrine, renal, neurologic, gastrointestinal, hepatic, genitourinary, haematologic. infective, rheumatic, inflammatory, immunologic or neoplastic disease.

  5. Subject's GP must have access to a computer during the consultation visit. 7. Subjects must have at least two medical specialists at least one of whom has access to a computer during the consultation visit.

  6. Subjects must be able to understand the purpose of the trial and undergo full and valid informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria
  1. Life expectancy of less than 12 months.
  2. Inability to carry a paper PHF or e-PHF and having no care-giver willing and able to accomplish same.
  3. Mentally unable to undertake valid informed consent.
  4. Patients who are not independent in the community, that cannot mobilise to see a specialist or requiring full nursing home care

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Electronic (USB) Portable Health FileElectronic (USB) Portable Health FilePatients randomized to this arm of the trial will be given a USB memory device that contains the Portable Health File (PHF) software. The portable health files contained core medical data which functions as a subset of a comprehensive medical record. The portable health file is updated by the health care provider at each visit and could also be updated by patient between visits if necessary.
Paper Portable Health FilePaper Portable Health FilePatients randomized to this arm of the trial will be given the paper Portable Health File. The paper Portable Health File contains core medical and other important data which functions as a subset of a more comprehensive medical record. This paper-based portable health file is updated by health care providers at each visit. The PHF can also be updated by patient between visits.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Combined endpoint of deaths, hospitalisations (excepting day only hospitalisations), and serious out-of-hospital events48 months + 36 month extension

The primary outcome is the total number of important clinical events (all hospitalisations except same-day hospitalisations, all serious out-of-hospital events and deaths).

See above: The assigned treatment (i.e., the e-PHF or p-PHF) will be used for 4 years total. Patients will also be followed for an additional 3 years beyond the conclusion of the randomised trial to see if there are any longer-term lag effects.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
guidelines uptake and documentationevery 6 months for 24 months then every 12 months until 48 months

Questionnaire, Self-report PROs and CROs

health service utilisation and health care costsevery 12 months for 48 months

Emergency Department encounters, General Practitioner and Specialist Encounters via record linkage, and their estimated costs by MBS and other costs data

medication errors, duplicative investigationsevery 12 months for 48 months

Questionnaire, Self-report PROs and CROs

information technology and computer expertiseevery 6 months for 24 months then every 12 months until 48 months

Questionnaire, Self-report PROs

clinical workflowevery 6 months for 2 years then every 12 months until 48 months

Questionnaire, Self-report PROs and CROs

subject and health care provider acceptability and satisfaction with portable health files (PHF)every 3 months for 12 months then every 6 months 24 months then every 12 months until 48 months

Questionnaire, Self-report PROs and CROs

health literacyevery 12 months until 48 months

Questionnaire, Self-report PROs

Quality of Lifeevery 12 months for 48 months

SF-36 and EQ-5D

adverse eventsevery 3 months for 24 months then every 6 months until 48 months

Questionnaire, Self-report PROs

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

St George Hospital

🇦🇺

Kogarah, New South Wales, Australia

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