Abstract

BackgroundMedically complex urban patients experiencing homelessness comprise a disproportionate number of high-cost, high-need patients. There are few studies of interventions to improve care for these populations; their social complexity makes them difficult to study and requires clinical and research collaboration. We present a protocol for a trial of the streamlined unified meaningfully managed interdisciplinary team (SUMMIT) team, an ambulatory ICU (A-ICU) intervention to improve utilization and patient experience that uses control populations to address limitations of prior research.Methods/designParticipants are patients at a Federally Qualified Health Center in Portland, Oregon that serves patients experiencing homelessness or who have substance use disorders. Participants meet at least one of the following criteria: > 1 hospitalization over past 6 months; at least one medical co-morbidity including uncontrolled diabetes, heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, liver disease, soft-tissue infection; and 1 mental health diagnosis or substance use disorder. We exclude patients if they have < 6 months to live, have cognitive impairment preventing consent, or are non-English speaking. Following consent and baseline assessment, we randomize participants to immediate SUMMIT intervention or wait-list control group. Participants receiving the SUMMIT intervention transfer care to a clinic-based team of physician, complex care nurse, care coordinator, social worker, and pharmacist with reduced panel size and flexible scheduling with emphasis on motivational interviewing, patient goal setting and advanced care planning. Wait-listed participants continue usual care plus engagement with community health worker intervention for 6 months prior to joining SUMMIT. The primary outcome is hospital utilization at 6 months; secondary outcomes include emergency department utilization, patient activation, and patient experience measures. We follow participants for 12 months after intervention initiation.DiscussionThe SUMMIT A-ICU is an intensive primary care intervention for high-utilizers impacted by homelessness. Use of a wait-list control design balances community and staff stakeholder needs, who felt all participants should have access to the intervention, while addressing research needs to include control populations. Design limitations include prolonged follow-up period that increases risk for attrition, and conflict between practice and research; including partner stakeholders and embedded researchers familiar with the population in study planning can mitigate these barriers.Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03224858, Registered 7/21/17 retrospectively registered https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03224858

Highlights

  • A small group of high cost-high needs patients (HCHN) accounts for a disproportionate percentage of health care expenditures [1, 2]

  • The streamlined unified meaningfully managed interdisciplinary team (SUMMIT) ambulatory ICU (A-ICU) is an intensive primary care intervention for high-utilizers impacted by homelessness

  • We describe a practiced-based research partnership between Old Town Clinic (OTC), an Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC), and Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), a research institution, in design of a randomized, wait-list control trial to assess whether an A-ICU model of care compared to existing patient centered medical home (PCMH) care improves healthcare utilization, patient experience, and self-efficacy at 6 months for medically and socially complex patients in an urban healthcare for the homeless setting

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Summary

Discussion

This paper describes a partnered approach to design and evaluation of a novel intensive A-ICU model of primary care for medically and socially complex patients at an FQHC clinic primarily serving low-income patients experiencing homelessness or substance use disorders. The results of this study will contribute to an evolving literature on intensive primary care interventions that addresses two gaps: (1) a need for more practiced-based research studies that include control populations; and (2) a focus on HCHN patients with high rates of homelessness and substance use. If the trial is successful, this study design may serve as a model for future evaluations of multi-component, interdisciplinary, practice-based evaluations of interventions for HCHN populations in other settings. Use of this design is not without trade-offs, including accounting for extended follow-up time that may increase risk for attrition [22]. Author details 1 Division of General Internal Medicine and Geriatrics, Oregon Health and Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road L475, Portland, OR 97239‐3098, USA. 2 Central City Concern, Portland, OR, USA. 3 Portland VA Medical Center, Portland, OR, USA. 4 Division of Hospital Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, USA. 5 School of Social Work, Portland State University, Portland, OR, USA

Introduction
Methods/design
Findings
25. Use the Teach-Back Method
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