Abstract

BackgroundMultimorbidity affects four of ten US adults and eight of ten adults ages 65 years and older, and frequently includes both cardiometabolic conditions and behavioral health concerns. Hispanics/Latinos (hereafter, Latinos) and other ethnic minorities are more vulnerable to these conditions, and face structural, social, and cultural barriers to obtaining quality physical and behavioral healthcare. We report the protocol for a randomized controlled trial that will compare Mi Puente (My Bridge), a cost-efficient care transitions intervention conducted by a specially trained Behavioral Health Nurse and Volunteer Community Mentor team, to usual care or best-practice discharge approaches, in reducing hospital utilization and improving patient reported outcomes in Latino adults with multiple cardiometabolic conditions and behavioral health concerns. The study will examine the degree to which Mi Puente produces superior reductions in hospital utilization at 30 and 180 days (primary aim) and better patient-reported outcomes (quality of life/physical health; barriers to healthcare; engagement with outpatient care; patient activation; resources for chronic disease management), and will examine the cost effectiveness of the Mi Puente intervention relative to usual care.MethodsParticipants are enrolled as inpatients at a South San Diego safety net hospital, using information from electronic medical records and in-person screenings. After providing written informed consent and completing self-report assessments, participants randomized to usual care receive best-practice discharge processes, which include educational materials, assistance with outpatient appointments, referrals to community-based providers, and other assistance (e.g., with billing, insurance) as required. Those randomized to Mi Puente receive usual-care materials and processes, along with inpatient visits and up to 4 weeks of follow-up phone calls from the intervention team to address their integrated physical-behavioral health needs and support the transition to outpatient care.DiscussionThe Mi Puente Behavioral Health Nurse and Volunteer Community Mentor team intervention is proposed as a cost-effective and culturally appropriate care transitions intervention for Latinos with multimorbidity and behavioral health concerns. If shown to be effective, close linkages with outpatient healthcare and community organizations will help maximize uptake, dissemination, and scaling of the Mi Puente intervention.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02723019. Registered on 30 March 2016.

Highlights

  • Multimorbidity affects four of ten United States (US) adults and eight of ten adults ages 65 years and older, and frequently includes both cardiometabolic conditions and behavioral health concerns

  • The Mi Puente Behavioral Health Nurse and Volunteer Community Mentor team intervention is proposed as a cost-effective and culturally appropriate care transitions intervention for Latinos with multimorbidity and behavioral health concerns

  • Multimorbidity has reached alarming levels in US adults, and is expected to further increase in prevalence as the population ages and chronic diseases are increasingly diagnosed in younger individuals [100, 101]

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Summary

Introduction

Multimorbidity affects four of ten US adults and eight of ten adults ages 65 years and older, and frequently includes both cardiometabolic conditions and behavioral health concerns. Several studies in the elderly have demonstrated a near-exponential relationship between number of chronic conditions and healthcare costs [7], with hospital utilization expenditures contributing significantly to these trends [8, 9]. Cardiometabolic disorders such as hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus, heart diseases, and behavioral health concerns, including mood and anxiety disorders, are among the ten most prevalent chronic conditions in US adults [1]. Latinos with diabetes mellitus and related conditions have more frequent complications and hospitalizations, greater functional impairment, lower quality of life, and higher mortality rates when compared to non-Latino whites [15, 16]

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