The Community In-Reach and Care Transition (CIRACT) clinical and cost-effectiveness study: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
The Community In-Reach and Care Transition (CIRACT) clinical and cost-effectiveness study: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
BACKGROUND: Older people represent a significant proportion of patients admitted to hospital. Their care compared to younger patients is more challenging, length of stay is longer, risk of hospital-acquired problems higher and the risk of being re-admitted within 28 days greater. This study aims to compare a Community In-Reach and Care Transition (CIRACT) service with Traditional Hospital Based rehabilitation (THB-Rehab) provided to the older person. The CIRACT service differs from the THB-rehab service in that they are able to provide more intensive hospital rehabilitation, visiting patients daily, and are able to continue with the patient's rehabilitation following discharge allowing a seamless, integrated discharge working alongside community providers. A pilot comparing the two services showed that the CIRACT service demonstrated reduced length of stay and reduced re-admission rates when analysed over a four-month period.
METHODS/DESIGN: This trial will evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of the CIRACT service, conducted as a randomised controlled trial (RCT) with an integral qualitative mechanism and action study designed to provide the explanatory and theoretical components on how the CIRACT service compares to current practice. The RCT element consists of 240 patients over 70 years of age, being randomised to either the THB therapy group or the CIRACT service following an unplanned hospital admission. The primary outcome will be hospital length of stay from admission to discharge from the general medical elderly care ward. Additional outcome measures including the Barthel Index, Charlson Co-morbidity Scale, EuroQoL-5D and the modified Client Service Receipt Inventory will be assessed at the time of recruitment and repeated at 91 days post-discharge. The qualitative mechanism and action study will involve a systematic programme of organisational profiling, observations of work processes, interviews with key informants and care providers and tracking of participants. In addition, a within-trial economic evaluation will be undertaken comparing the CIRACT and THB-rehab services to determine cost-effectiveness.
DISCUSSION: The outcome of the study will inform clinical decision-making, with respect to allocation of resources linked to hospital discharge planning and re-admissions, in a resource intensive and growing group of patients.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registered with the ISRCTN registry ( ISCRCTN94393315 ) on 25 April 2013 (version 3.1, 11 September 2014).
Clinical Protocols, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Costs and Cost Analysis, Humans, Length of Stay, Patient Readmission/statistics & numerical data, Qualitative Research, Rehabilitation
41
Watson, Alison
8c6e912a-7c1b-465e-911f-7cc48a59fa4c
Charlesworth, Lisa
409036d3-9cd2-4ebf-b0e6-49818cf16767
Jacob, Ruth
cbdcadcf-85fc-488e-911b-384de63f44b4
Kendrick, Denise
33ad9db9-6d98-4e87-a2ad-323b289e3a16
Logan, Philippa
c982c4fe-dff1-413f-b0ba-b3de40890c4c
Marshall, Fiona
f886268d-ed93-4a4a-a60b-2cbc4d7d2774
Montgomery, Alan
6f6e4e9e-e78b-43b0-9334-05522cfd6cdf
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Tan, Wei
d91f9c26-d81e-49db-933f-3d379f16d732
Walker, Maria
e2d16ebb-8ae8-4801-9897-9e07f2aceffc
Waring, Justin
63cbd666-b744-4b63-80b5-cf5108cb8de7
Whitham, Diane
683ed54e-283e-47e0-98e3-fb02831fc862
Sahota, Opinder
1816e216-bea1-412c-948d-1c1ab8fdbc28
8 February 2015
Watson, Alison
8c6e912a-7c1b-465e-911f-7cc48a59fa4c
Charlesworth, Lisa
409036d3-9cd2-4ebf-b0e6-49818cf16767
Jacob, Ruth
cbdcadcf-85fc-488e-911b-384de63f44b4
Kendrick, Denise
33ad9db9-6d98-4e87-a2ad-323b289e3a16
Logan, Philippa
c982c4fe-dff1-413f-b0ba-b3de40890c4c
Marshall, Fiona
f886268d-ed93-4a4a-a60b-2cbc4d7d2774
Montgomery, Alan
6f6e4e9e-e78b-43b0-9334-05522cfd6cdf
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Tan, Wei
d91f9c26-d81e-49db-933f-3d379f16d732
Walker, Maria
e2d16ebb-8ae8-4801-9897-9e07f2aceffc
Waring, Justin
63cbd666-b744-4b63-80b5-cf5108cb8de7
Whitham, Diane
683ed54e-283e-47e0-98e3-fb02831fc862
Sahota, Opinder
1816e216-bea1-412c-948d-1c1ab8fdbc28
Watson, Alison, Charlesworth, Lisa, Jacob, Ruth, Kendrick, Denise, Logan, Philippa, Marshall, Fiona, Montgomery, Alan, Sach, Tracey, Tan, Wei, Walker, Maria, Waring, Justin, Whitham, Diane and Sahota, Opinder
(2015)
The Community In-Reach and Care Transition (CIRACT) clinical and cost-effectiveness study: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.
Trials, 16, .
(doi:10.1186/s13063-015-0551-2).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Older people represent a significant proportion of patients admitted to hospital. Their care compared to younger patients is more challenging, length of stay is longer, risk of hospital-acquired problems higher and the risk of being re-admitted within 28 days greater. This study aims to compare a Community In-Reach and Care Transition (CIRACT) service with Traditional Hospital Based rehabilitation (THB-Rehab) provided to the older person. The CIRACT service differs from the THB-rehab service in that they are able to provide more intensive hospital rehabilitation, visiting patients daily, and are able to continue with the patient's rehabilitation following discharge allowing a seamless, integrated discharge working alongside community providers. A pilot comparing the two services showed that the CIRACT service demonstrated reduced length of stay and reduced re-admission rates when analysed over a four-month period.
METHODS/DESIGN: This trial will evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of the CIRACT service, conducted as a randomised controlled trial (RCT) with an integral qualitative mechanism and action study designed to provide the explanatory and theoretical components on how the CIRACT service compares to current practice. The RCT element consists of 240 patients over 70 years of age, being randomised to either the THB therapy group or the CIRACT service following an unplanned hospital admission. The primary outcome will be hospital length of stay from admission to discharge from the general medical elderly care ward. Additional outcome measures including the Barthel Index, Charlson Co-morbidity Scale, EuroQoL-5D and the modified Client Service Receipt Inventory will be assessed at the time of recruitment and repeated at 91 days post-discharge. The qualitative mechanism and action study will involve a systematic programme of organisational profiling, observations of work processes, interviews with key informants and care providers and tracking of participants. In addition, a within-trial economic evaluation will be undertaken comparing the CIRACT and THB-rehab services to determine cost-effectiveness.
DISCUSSION: The outcome of the study will inform clinical decision-making, with respect to allocation of resources linked to hospital discharge planning and re-admissions, in a resource intensive and growing group of patients.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registered with the ISRCTN registry ( ISCRCTN94393315 ) on 25 April 2013 (version 3.1, 11 September 2014).
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More information
Published date: 8 February 2015
Keywords:
Clinical Protocols, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Costs and Cost Analysis, Humans, Length of Stay, Patient Readmission/statistics & numerical data, Qualitative Research, Rehabilitation
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 480852
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480852
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: 3c416a7b-6404-418e-9c28-a071a15800a7
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Date deposited: 10 Aug 2023 16:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20
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Contributors
Author:
Alison Watson
Author:
Lisa Charlesworth
Author:
Ruth Jacob
Author:
Denise Kendrick
Author:
Philippa Logan
Author:
Fiona Marshall
Author:
Alan Montgomery
Author:
Tracey Sach
Author:
Wei Tan
Author:
Maria Walker
Author:
Justin Waring
Author:
Diane Whitham
Author:
Opinder Sahota
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