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Multi-Komponenten-Familienunterstützungstool-Intervention (FST)
Surrogates will have access (computer, tablet, or mobile phone) to the interactive web-based Family Support Tool. The tool will familiarize families with the ICU and prepare them for their interactions with the clinical team by completing specific sections of the Family Support Tool upon study enrollment, before family meetings, and any other time they wish. The ICU team will receive a tool-generated summary of information about the family before each family meeting, including their main questions and concerns, information about the patient's values and preferences, prognostic expectations, and unmet psychological needs.
The Family Support Tool intervention is designed to help families navigate the emotional, psychological, and cognitive complexities of being a surrogate for an incapacitated critically ill patient and also to enhance the timeliness and quality of clinician-family communication. The intervention consists of three components:
- Proactive clinician-family meetings within 48 hours of enrollment and every 5-7 days thereafter.
- Family members complete sections of an interactive web-based tool upon study enrollment, before family meetings, and any other time they wish. Family members can access the tool anywhere via computer, tablet, or mobile phone. The first section of the tool is completed on the first day of study enrollment and contains: video messages supporting families including stories from other families and their experiences and coping strategies, tips on self-care and links to hospital resources. The second and third sections of the FST are completed before scheduled clinician-family meetings on study day 2-3 and again 5-7 days later. These sections of the tool contain: videos detailing what to expect during family meetings, interactive exercises and prompts about patient values, prognosis, care expectations and treatment leanings to help prepare for family meetings. The study team will provide families a printed summary sheet of their main questions for the ICU team that they are encouraged to bring to the family meeting.
- Before each scheduled family meeting the ICU team receives a written report that summarizes the family's main questions and concerns, information about the patient's values and preferences, surrogates' prognostic expectations, and a visual display of their unmet PC needs.
Randomized Trial of a Scalable, Interactive Tool to Support Surrogate Decision-makers of Critically Ill Older Adults
- FST
- STUDY20110367
- R01AG066731-01 (Zuwendung/Vertrag der US-NIH)
Psychological Distress
End of Life Care
Critical Illness
Surrogate Decision Making
Goal Concordant Care
| Teilnehmergruppe/Studienarm | Intervention/Behandlung |
|---|---|
ExperimentellIntervention Multi-component Family Support Intervention | Multi-component Family Support Intervention The multi-component intervention is designed to enhance the quality of clinician-family communication and help families manage the emotional and cognitive complexities of surrogate decision-making. It involves: 1) proactive clinician-family meetings; 2) use by surrogates of an interactive web-based tool throughout the ICU stay which is narrated by family members of ICU patients and includes stories and experiences from other families, self-care strategies, brief videos explaining what to expect during family meetings, a question prompt list, an interactive values clarification exercise, and an explanation of different treatment pathways for critically ill patients. 3. Prior to the proactive family meetings, the ICU team is provided with a summary of the family's main questions/concerns, their prognostic expectations, a summary of the patient's values and preferences, and surrogates' current ratings of the extent to which their psychosocial needs are being addressed in the ICU. |
Keine InterventionControl Usual ICU care | Nicht zutreffend |
| Ergebnismessung | Beschreibung der Messung | Zeitrahmen |
|---|---|---|
Patient and family centeredness of care | 12-item Patient Perceived Patient-Centeredness of Care Scale (PPPC), previously modified for use by surrogates, completed at 3-month telephone follow-up of surrogates. | 3 months after hospital discharge |
| Ergebnismessung | Beschreibung der Messung | Zeitrahmen |
|---|---|---|
Composite measure of goal-concordant care | Assessed by surrogates at 3-month telephone follow-up using an 8-item composite measure of goal-concordant care. | 3 months after hospital discharge |
Satisfaction with ICU care | Assessed using the Family Satisfaction in the ICU (FS-ICU) instrument at 3-month telephone follow-up of surrogates. The FS-ICU is a 24-item scale concerning satisfaction with care, communication, and decision-making in the ICU. | 3 months after hospital discharge |
Unmet palliative care needs | Measured using the adapted Needs of Social Nature, Existential Concerns, Symptoms, and Therapeutic Interaction (NEST) scale administered to surrogates on day 5 post-randomization. The adapted NEST scale is designed for ICU use; it is a 13-item instrument developed to identify unmet social, emotional, physical, and care-system needs in serious illness. | Measured at day 5 post-randomization |
Surrogates' prognostic awareness | Assessed on study day 5 using the validated Clinician-Surrogate Concordance Scale (CSCS), which our research team developed. The single item CSCS has excellent test-retest reliability (r =0.91). It has established criterion validity and responsiveness to change. | Measured at day 5 post-randomization |
Surrogates' clarity about patient values and preferences | Assessed by surrogates after family meetings on study day 5 using the "informed" and "values clarity" subscales, 6 items out of the 16-item Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS). The scale has established responsiveness to change, test-retest reliability (r=0.81), internal consistency (α=0.92), and discriminant validity. | Measured at day 5 post-randomization |
Clinician-family conflict | A brief survey (measured by both surrogates and ICU clinicians) to determine the level of family-clinician conflict during index hospitalization | Measured at day 5 post-randomization |
Perceived effectiveness of Family Support Tool | A brief survey asking (intervention only) surrogate participants perceived effectiveness of the FST intervention | Measured at day 5 post-randomization |
Risk of post-traumatic stress disorder | Assessed using the Impact of Events Scale-revised (IES-R) at 6 months. The IES-R is a valid, reliable, and responsive 22 -item instrument measuring symptoms of avoidance and intrusive thoughts. A score 33 indicates a high risk of PTSD. It has been used successfully among ICU surrogates. | 6 months after hospital discharge |
Surrogates' symptoms of anxiety and depression | The HADS is a 14-item, two-domain (anxiety, depression) instrument with established reliability and validity among ICU surrogates that is recommended by consensus guidelines for use among ICU surrogates. Assessed at 6-month telephone follow-up. | 6 months after hospital discharge |
Resource utilization | Among hospital survivors we will perform interviews with surrogates at 3-months and 6-months to identify patient's post-discharge healthcare utilization (e.g. hospital admissions, ED visits, skilled-nursing facility use, hospice use, etc.), assigning costs using validated methods. | 3 months and 6 months after hospital discharge |
Proportion of patients with new DNR order during index hospitalization and time to first DNR order during index hospitalization | 6 months after hospital discharge | |
Proportion of patients who received comfort-focused care during the index hospitalization and time to comfort-focused care | 6 months after hospital discharge | |
Proportion of patients enrolled in hospice during index hospitalization | 6 months after hospital discharge | |
ICU and hospital length of stay | Duration of time patient spent in ICU and hospital | 6 months after hospital discharge |
Duration of mechanical ventilation | Duration of time patient spent on mechanical ventilation during index hospitalization | 6 months after hospital discharge |
Cost of index hospitalization | Assigning costs using validated methods, the cost of index hospitalization will be calculated | 6 months after hospital discharge |
Time to hospice | time in days from enrollment to hospice | 6 months after hospital discharge |
Patient
- Age ≥18
- Lack of decision-making capacity as determined by clinical examination by the attending physician or designee
- Clinical indication of at least 40% risk of death or ≥40% chance of new, severe long-term functional impairment (needs assistance with ≥ 2 ADLs), as judged by the patient's attending physician or designee
Surrogate
- The primary surrogate is determined by the patient's advance directive or, if no directive exists, by following the hierarchy of surrogates codified in state law.
- Up to 3 additional surrogates
Clinician
1. Patient's primary attending (or their designee)
EXCLUSION
Patient
Lack of a surrogate decision maker
Family not available for study
Imminent death (within 24 hours); goals of care are already "comfort measures only"; decision to withdraw life support has already been made
Currently participating in a competing research study that does not allow co-enrollment
Incarcerated or on an involuntary hold
Died prior to enrollment
Discharged prior to enrollment
Regained capacity prior to enrollment
Physician declined patient's participation
Physician and designee declined own participation
MD expects transfer orders will be written or the patient will be transferred within 36 hours of screening
Greater than 5 ICU days during the current hospitalization
Surrogate
- Age <18 years
- Cannot read or understand English
- Cannot complete questionnaires due to physical or cognitive limitations
- Has no access to or cannot travel to access the internet
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Oregon Health and Science University237 aktive klinische Studien zum Erkunden
- 🏛️National Institute on Aging (NIA)
- ⚕️New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation
- ⚕️VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System
Universität von North Carolina, Chapel Hill245 aktive klinische Studien zum Erkunden
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