Protocol for a randomised trial of an interprofessional team-delivered intervention to support surrogate decision-makers in ICUs

Article indépendant

LINCOLN, Taylor | SHIELDS, Anne-Marie | BUDDADHUMARUK, Praewpannarai | CHANG, Chung-Chou H | PIKE, Francis | CHEN, Hsiangyu | BROWN, Elke | KOZAR, Veronica | PIDRO, Caroline | KAHN, Jeremy M | DARBY, Joseph M | MARTIN, Susan | ANGUS, Derek C | ARNOLD, Robert M | WHITE, Douglas B

Introduction: Although shortcomings in clinician–family communication and decision making for incapacitated, critically ill patients are common, there are few rigorously tested interventions to improve outcomes. In this manuscript, we present our methodology for the Pairing Re-engineered Intensive Care Unit Teams with Nurse-Driven Emotional support and Relationship Building (PARTNER 2) trial, and discuss design challenges and their resolution. Methods and analysis: This is a pragmatic, stepped-wedge, cluster randomised controlled trial comparing the PARTNER 2 intervention to usual care among 690 incapacitated, critically ill patients and their surrogates in five ICUs in Pennsylvania. Eligible subjects will include critically ill patients at high risk of death and/or severe long-term functional impairment, their main surrogate decision-maker and their clinicians. The PARTNER intervention is delivered by the interprofessional ICU team and overseen by 4–6 nurses from each ICU. It involves: (1) advanced communication skills training for nurses to deliver support to surrogates throughout the ICU stay; (2) deploying a structured family support pathway; (3) enacting strategies to foster collaboration between ICU and palliative care services and (4) providing intensive implementation support to each ICU to incorporate the family support pathway into clinicians’ workflow. The primary outcome is surrogates’ ratings of the quality of communication during the ICU stay as assessed by telephone at 6-month follow-up. Prespecified secondary outcomes include surrogates’ scores on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, the Impact of Event Scale, the modified Patient Perception of Patient Centredness scale, the Decision Regret Scale, nurses’ scores on the Maslach Burnout Inventory, and length of stay during and costs of the index hospitalisation. We also discuss key methodological challenges, including determining the optimal level of randomisation, using existing staff to deploy the intervention and maximising long-term follow-up of participants. Ethics and dissemination: We obtained ethics approval through the University of Pittsburgh, Human Research Protection Office. The findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033521

Voir la revue «BMJ Open, 10»

Autres numéros de la revue «BMJ Open»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Protocol for a randomised trial of an interpr...

Article indépendant | LINCOLN, Taylor | BMJ Open | n°3 | vol.10

Introduction: Although shortcomings in clinician–family communication and decision making for incapacitated, critically ill patients are common, there are few rigorously tested interventions to improve outcomes. In this manu...

Subject recruitment and retention against qua...

Article indépendant | SHIELDS, Anne-Marie | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°5 | vol.12

Les études de soins en fin de vie font face à des difficultés associées au recrutement et l'usure de l'échantillon. Les auteurs analysent donc les données sur le recrutement et les efforts de maintien utilisées dans un essai clini...

Subject recruitment and retention against qua...

Article indépendant | SHIELDS, Anne-Marie | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°5 | vol.12

Les études de soins en fin de vie font face à des difficultés associées au recrutement et l'usure de l'échantillon. Les auteurs analysent donc les données sur le recrutement et les efforts de maintien utilisées dans un essai clini...

De la même série

Cross-sectional survey on public attitudes an...

Article indépendant | CHEN, Duan-Rung | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

OBJECTIVE: To examine the public's stance on physician-assisted dying (PAD) in Taiwan across different PAD scenarios and identify demographic and psychosocial factors associated with the levels of support. DESIGN: Cross-sectional ...

Identifying specific subgroups of older patie...

Article indépendant | VISADE, Fabien | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

OBJECTIVE: To identify specific subgroups of older patients at risk of repeated hospital readmissions and death. DESIGN: Prospective, multicentre, DAMAGE (Patient Outcomes After Hospitalization in Acute Geriatric Unit) cohort of a...

Developing a set of key principles for care p...

Article indépendant | TAYLOR, Jonathan | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

BACKGROUND: Older adult care homes in England are required to develop care plans on behalf of each of their residents and to make these documents available to those who provide care. However, there is a lack of formal agreement ar...

Barriers and enablers encountered by bereaved...

Article indépendant | BRABEN, Liberty | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

BACKGROUND: Caregivers of people with motor neuron disease (MND) face more negative consequences of caregiving than other terminal illnesses. The impact of this caregiver burden can negatively influence bereavement outcomes. OBJEC...

Top 10 palliative care research priorities in...

Article indépendant | BARBARET, Cécile | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

INTRODUCTION: As one means to avoid waste in research investment, involving patients as full partners in research has become increasingly frequent. There is clearly a low level of investment in palliative care research. Following ...

Chargement des enrichissements...