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Can Mobility Technicians Provide Value to Hospitalized Patients?

Not Applicable
Withdrawn
Conditions
Hip Fractures
Lower Extremity Fracture
Lung Transplant
Registration Number
NCT03874767
Lead Sponsor
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Brief Summary

The specific aim of this study is to determine the impact of the addition of a dedicated mobility technician to the care team on specialty specific outcomes for patients recovering from surgical treatment for a hip or lower extremity long bone fracture or a lung transplant.

The practice of post-operative early ambulation has been shown to improve outcomes by promoting enhanced recovery after surgery in a variety of patients. To that end, VUMC is establishing a "Culture of Mobility". To do so, additional personnel are being hired to help ambulate patients with traumatic hip and femur fractures, other fractures of the lower extremity long bones, as well as those post-lung transplant or readmitted post-lung transplant based upon the best available evidence supporting mobility programs. The added personnel are needed as the currently available resources have insufficient bandwidth to ensure complete early ambulation for all patients. The relative effectiveness of adding a dedicated resource is assumed. Although the literature suggests adding person-hours increases the amount of mobility achieved, there is an opportunity to evaluate whether this is really the case.

The goal of this study is to evaluate the impact of adding the mobility technician to the existing care team. The mobility technician will be assisting patients who could benefit from early ambulation after surgery. We hypothesize that by adding this staffing resource, more patients will get the appropriate level of usual care. Specifically, we expect that adding the resource increases the proportion of those patients who are receiving the prescribed amount of early ambulation post-surgery, with subsequent improvements in functional independence at discharge, and decreases length of stay since patients achieve readiness for discharge sooner.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
Not specified
Inclusion Criteria
  • All traumatic fractures of the hip or a lower extremity long bone
  • Post-lung transplant patient
  • Patient readmitted following a lung transplant
Exclusion Criteria
  • Non-traumatic joint replacements
  • Patients with ankle fractures
  • Pre-lung transplant patients
  • Patients readmitted to the orthopedics unit following a traumatic injury

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
AM-PAC 6 Clicks score7 days post ICU discharge +/- 1 day for post-lung transplant patients and day 7 +/- 1 days for readmitted post-lung transplant patients. Raw scores range from 6-24, where a lower number suggests higher functional/mobile impairment.

The AM-PAC 6 clicks score will be the co-primary outcome for this study within the transplant population and is a measurement that helps describe patient basic mobility. This score will be obtained for this study from the Electronic Medical Record (EMR)

Length of StayAdmission to discharge (usually less than 1 week)

The primary outcome for this study will be length of stay (LOS), defined as time from admission to the unit to discharge from the unit in days. The LOS will be obtained for this study from the Electronic Medical Record (EMR).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Johns Hopkins Highest Level of Mobility (JH-HLM) scoreAt discharge (usually less than 1 week after admission)

The JH-HLM scale was developed based on input from multiple disciplines (nursing, rehabilitation therapists, physicians, etc.) to help record the mobility that a patient actually does, standardize the description of patient mobility, and to be used as a performance measure for quality improvement projects.

The JH-HLM score measures a patient's mobility. The score ranges from 1 to 8, where 1 means most limited mobility and 8 means normal mobility.

Total amount of mobility therapyAdmission to discharge (usually less than 1 week)

Amount of mobility provided, which will be derived from clinical data extracted from the EMR. This will be measured through number additional mobility sessions.

Amount of ambulationAdmission to discharge (usually less than 1 week)

Amount of ambulation achieved

Function Independence Measurement (FIM) scoreAt discharge (usually less than 1 week after admission)

Patient function is assessed using the FIM™ instrument at the start of a rehabilitation episode of care and at the end of a rehabilitation episode of care. Admission assessment is collected within 72 hours of the start of a rehabilitation episode. Discharge assessment is collected within 72 hours prior to the end of a rehabilitation episode.

The FIM score measures a patient's mobility. The score ranges from 6 to 24, where 6 means most limited mobility and 24 means normal mobility.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

🇺🇸

Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Vanderbilt University Medical Center
🇺🇸Nashville, Tennessee, United States

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