Emergency Care at Home
- Conditions
- Emergency Medical ServicesEmergency Department Visits
- Interventions
- Other: Emergency care at a brick-and-mortar emergency departmentOther: Emergency care at home
- Registration Number
- NCT06299774
- Lead Sponsor
- Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Brief Summary
This study will assess the efficacy of receiving emergency care at home versus in the brick-and-mortar emergency department.
- Detailed Description
Care in an emergency department has many benefits. It delivers high-intensity critical care on demand to large populations and serves as an efficient gateway to hospitalization. However, some populations may not be well-served by the traditional emergency department, particularly older adults, adults with serious illness, and those who are homebound. Many harms may come to older adults in the emergency department, including delirium, pressure injuries, infections, anxiety, and others. Emergency department crowding secondary to hospital capacity constraints may also lead to suboptimal care, as patients wait many hours for their inpatient bed even after a disposition decision is made.
As a result, the investigators will evaluate in a randomized controlled trial the efficacy of emergency care delivered at home instead of in the emergency department
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 1500
- Age >= 18 years
- Resides within Home Hospital geographic area
- Lives in permanent housing (i.e., not in temporary housing such as a shelter)
- Patient of a Mass General Brigham primary care provider
- Primary care provider attests that their triage recommendation is the emergency department
- Emergency care at home nurse triages the participant to the emergency department or urgent care
- Patient attests that they intend to go to the emergency department
- Insurance: workers compensation and motor vehicle accident
- Lives in a healthcare facility (Skilled Nursing, Rehab, long term acute care)
- Patient/caregiver cannot answer phone or door
- Active substance use
- Acute psychiatric concerns (e.g., suicidal ideation, even if passive)
- Home safety concerns (e.g., intimate partner violence)
- High-risk features:
oHigh Risk Signs, if available: Heart rate > 120 Systolic blood pressure < 90 Shock Index (heart rate divided by systolic blood pressure) > 1 Oxygen < 93% on ambient air Increase in oxygen requirement new or > 2 liters Respiratory rate > 28 Diaphoresis oHigh Risk Symptoms: Active chest pain Severe work of breathing Syncope Hemoptysis Seizure Other concerning symptom per nurse triage
- Requires inpatient-level care
- Requires specialty consultation
- Requires physical, occupational, or speech therapy
- Requires blood transfusion
- Requires internal physical exam maneuver (e.g. rectal exam, genitourinary exam)
- Requires imaging that is not available at home
- Requires monitoring that is not available at home
- Troubleshooting wound vacs
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Usual care Emergency care at a brick-and-mortar emergency department Emergency care in a brick-and-mortar emergency department. Emergency care at home Emergency care at home Emergency care in the patient's home.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Participant with an emergency department presentation, observation, or hospitalization within 9 days From the day after emergency care visit until 9 days later, up to 9 days Whether a patient presented to the emergency department, was observed in the emergency department, or was hospitalized in the 9 days following their index emergency care visit. Excludes patients who were admitted on their index visit.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Number of days at home within 9 days From the day after emergency care visit until 9 days later The number of days the patient spends at home in the 9 days following the index emergency care visit.
Time to care initiation From the time a consultation is placed in the electronic health record to the time a patient is seen by a clinician, up to 2880 minutes. Number of minutes from when the consultation for emergency care at home was placed to emergency care (either in the home or in the emergency department) occurs.
Time spent receiving care From the time a patient is seen by a clinician to the time a patient completes their emergency care, up to 1440 minutes. Number of minutes from when a patient was seen by a clinician to they are dismissed from the emergency room (usual care) or the paramedic leaves their home (experimental).
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Massachusetts General Hospital
🇺🇸Boston, Massachusetts, United States