Abstract

BackgroundPeople who sustain spinal cord injuries in low- and middle-income countries are vulnerable to life-threatening complications after discharge. The aim of this trial is to determine the effect on all-cause mortality of a sustainable model of community-based care provided over the first 2 years after discharge.Methods and analysisThe CIVIC trial is a single centre, parallel group trial with concealed and stratified randomisation. The protocol has been previously published (BMJ Open 2016;6:e010350). This paper provides the accompanying detailed statistical plan. In total, 410 people with recent spinal cord injury who are wheelchair dependent and about to be discharged from the Centre for the Rehabilitation of the Paralysed in Bangladesh are randomised to intervention or control groups. Participants assigned to the intervention group receive a model of community-based care in which a case manager provides ongoing telephone-based support and visits participants in their homes over a 2-year period. Participants assigned to the control group receive usual care which may involve a follow-up phone call or a home visit. The primary outcome is all-cause mortality at 2 years as determined by a blinded assessor (Bangladesh does not have a death registry). The primary effectiveness analysis will compare Kaplan-Meier survival curves (time from allocation to death) in the intervention and control groups using the log-rank test (two-tailed α = 0.05). Participants will be censored at the time they were last known to be alive or at the time of the follow-up assessment. Recruitment finished in March 2018 and the last assessment will be conducted in March 2020.DiscussionThe CIVIC trial will provide unbiased and precise estimates of the effectiveness of a model of community-based care for people with spinal cord injuries in Bangladesh. The results will have implications for provision of health services for people with spinal cord injuries and other conditions that cause serious disability in low-income and middle-income countries.Trial registrationANZCTR, ACTRN12615000630516, U1111-1171-1876. Registered on 17 June 2015.

Highlights

  • A longitudinal cohort study of a representative sample of 350 people with spinal cord injury who survived until discharge from a specialised hospital in Bangladesh found that one in five people who were wheelchair-dependent at discharge had died within 2 years [5]

  • Our research team, which includes health professionals and health service providers based in Bangladesh, has proposed an inexpensive model of community-based care for people discharged from hospital with spinal cord injury

  • The model of care involves assigning a case manager to each person with spinal cord injury at the time the person is discharged from hospital

Read more

Summary

Introduction

People who sustain spinal cord injuries in low- and middle-income countries are vulnerable to lifethreatening complications after discharge. The aim of this trial is to determine the effect on all-cause mortality of a sustainable model of community-based care provided over the first 2 years after discharge. Our research team, which includes health professionals and health service providers based in Bangladesh, has proposed an inexpensive model of community-based care for people discharged from hospital with spinal cord injury. The model of care involves assigning a case manager to each person with spinal cord injury at the time the person is discharged from hospital. There is a particular focus on preventing and treating pressure ulcers

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call