Clinical Trial: Safe Passages: Ensuring Quality Transitions From NICU (Neonatal Intensive Care Unit) to Ambulatory Care

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: Safe Passages: Ensuring Quality Transitions From NICU to Ambulatory Care

Brief Summary: Infants born prematurely or with complex congenital abnormalities are surviving to discharge in growing numbers and often require significant monitoring and coordination of care in the ambulatory setting. The specific aims of this project are to determine the effectiveness of a redesigned discharge process that includes a Health Coach and an expanded discharge binder to improve health outcomes in the post discharge follow-up period as compared with usual care. The outcomes to be evaluated include the occurrence of adverse events in the post-discharge period, quality of follow up care, and caregiver satisfaction with the process.

Detailed Summary: Infants born prematurely or with complex congenital abnormalities are surviving to discharge in growing numbers and often require significant monitoring and coordination of care in the ambulatory setting. These complicated infants have spent all of their lives in the hospital setting, and are strangers in their own homes. Although the transition of the fragile child from intensive care specialist to the ambulatory care provider begins at hospital discharge, it is incomplete until the child receives appropriate outpatient follow-up with a primary care pediatrician. Over this prolonged time period, the child is especially vulnerable to errors related to breakdowns in care coordination and communication because the responsibility for the patient's care is often not clearly specified. Our team of investigators has recently completed a Health Care Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (HFMEA) of the transition from neonatal intensive care to the ambulatory environment. We will expand upon the Care Transitions Intervention developed by Coleman et al that addressed the problems of older adults who were discharged from hospital to home. In this model, advanced practice nurses, trained as coaches, taught patients and families to coordinate care for themselves, fostering independence. We will include the use of a personal health record, to include specific instructions to recognize and self-manage the most common problems in this population and we will use information technology (IT) to enhance communication with families and with community providers, in particular the primary care provider. Having identified that lack of knowledge and skills on the part of community providers about how to manage these infants as an important risk point, we will add to the Coleman intervention by providing "just-in-time" information to the primary care providers to enhance their knowledge and skill in managing the common problems of neonatal nursery graduates, provided electronically v
Sponsor: Virginia Moyer

Current Primary Outcome: adverse outcomes in first 30 days after discharge from NICU [ Time Frame: 30 days ]

unplanned ER visits, Unplanned readmissions, deaths, missed appointments


Original Primary Outcome: Same as current

Current Secondary Outcome:

  • adherence to recommended practices for care of the fragile newborn [ Time Frame: 6 months ]
    adherence by primary care physicians to recommended practices for management of the fragile NICU graduate
  • Caregiver assessment of the discharge process [ Time Frame: 2-3 and 30 days after discharge ]
    Using a validated measure, the CTM-Neo, caregivers will be interviewed both shortly after discharge and at 30 days to determine satisfaction with the transition from hospital to home.


Original Secondary Outcome: Same as current

Information By: Baylor College of Medicine

Dates:
Date Received: March 10, 2010
Date Started: March 2010
Date Completion:
Last Updated: July 24, 2015
Last Verified: July 2015