Abstract
BackgroundEach year in the USA, 1.5–2.5 million Americans are so severely injured that they require inpatient hospitalization. Multiple conditions including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), alcohol and drug use problems, depression, and chronic medical conditions are endemic among physical trauma survivors with and without traumatic brain injuries.Methods/designThe trauma survivors outcomes and support (TSOS) effectiveness-implementation hybrid trial is designed to test the delivery of high-quality screening and intervention for PTSD and comorbidities across 24 US level I trauma center sites. The pragmatic trial aims to recruit 960 patients. The TSOS investigation employs a stepped wedge cluster randomized design in which sites are randomized sequentially to initiate the intervention. Patients identified by a 10-domain electronic health record screen as high risk for PTSD are formally assessed with the PTSD Checklist for study entry. Patients randomized to the intervention condition will receive stepped collaborative care, while patients randomized to the control condition will receive enhanced usual care. The intervention training begins with a 1-day on-site workshop in the collaborative care intervention core elements that include care management, medication, cognitive behavioral therapy, and motivational-interviewing elements targeting PTSD and comorbidity. The training is followed by site supervision from the study team. The investigation aims to determine if intervention patients demonstrate significant reductions in PTSD and depressive symptoms, suicidal ideation, alcohol consumption, and improvements in physical function when compared to control patients. The study uses implementation science conceptual frameworks to evaluate the uptake of the intervention model. At the completion of the pragmatic trial, results will be presented at an American College of Surgeons’ policy summit. Twenty-four representative US level I trauma centers have been selected for the study, and the protocol is being rolled out nationally.DiscussionThe TSOS pragmatic trial simultaneously aims to establish the effectiveness of the collaborative care intervention targeting PTSD and comorbidity while also addressing sustainable implementation through American College of Surgeons’ regulatory policy. The TSOS effectiveness-implementation hybrid design highlights the importance of partnerships with professional societies that can provide regulatory mandates targeting enhanced health care system sustainability of pragmatic trial results.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT02655354. Registered 27 July 2015.
Highlights
Each year in the USA, 1.5–2.5 million Americans are so severely injured that they require inpatient hospitalization
The trauma survivors outcomes and support (TSOS) pragmatic trial simultaneously aims to establish the effectiveness of the collaborative care intervention targeting posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and comorbidity while addressing sustainable implementation through American College of Surgeons’ regulatory policy
The TSOS effectiveness-implementation hybrid design highlights the importance of partnerships with professional societies that can provide regulatory mandates targeting enhanced health care system sustainability of pragmatic trial results
Summary
The current effectiveness-implementation hybrid is innovative in its combination of pragmatic trial and implementation science conceptual frameworks. The potential for a policy target sets up a novel staged implementation context whereby the fielding of the trial and the implementation of the evidence-based intervention can yield insight into the sustainable delivery of PTSD screening and intervention procedures for trauma centers nationwide In this context, previously described Rapid Assessment Procedures that harness clinical ethnographic methods to embed participant observation within front-line implementation teams have great potential utility [70, 121,122,123]. A hybrid effectiveness-implementation spectrum pragmatic trial targeting screening and intervention for PTSD and comorbidity can be readily designed and feasibly implemented across US level I trauma centers These findings highlight the importance of partnerships with professional societies such as the American College of Surgeons’ that can provide regulatory mandates in order to enhance widespread implementation of pragmatic trials results.
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