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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Chittagong Medical College and Hospital | OTHER |
| Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit | OTHER |
| Asian University for Women | UNKNOWN |
| Noora Health |
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The goal of this trial is to evaluate whether a family participation training intervention can reduce caregiver strain and health worker workload, and improve patient outcomes and collaboration in the medicine wards of Chittagong Medical College Hospital (CMCH).
General objectives:
Specific objectives:
The study will use a step-by-step roll-out, introducing training at different times in three wards, to see if it improves care compared to usual practice.
Study participants will include adult patients, their family caregivers, nurses, doctors, ward assistants, and hospital administrators. Health workers will be trained to deliver sessions to family caregivers of hospitalised patients on hospital introduction, basic care tasks, warning sign detection, oral medication administration, caregiver handover, and discharge preparedness.
Background:
In many resource-limited settings, understaffed hospitals rely on the families of patients to provide care during admission. Family participation in hospital care may include washing, toileting, feeding, administering medication, and detecting warning signs. Family participation in hospital care is commonplace at Chittagong Medical College Hospital (CMCH) and other hospitals in Bangladesh. These care tasks are often performed informally, untrained, and unsupported, resulting in a high mental and physical burden of care for family caregivers, unknown effects on patient outcomes and potentially an even higher workload for health workers. This study proposes to implement and evaluate a family participation training intervention in the general medicine wards of CMCH. Building on prior preparatory research, the intervention aims to reduce family caregiver strain, lower health workers' workloads, enhance patient outcomes and improve collaboration between family caregivers and health workers.
Objective The primary objectives of the study are to assess the effect of a family participation training intervention on the medicine wards of CMCH and to examine how, for whom and under what circumstances a family participation training intervention works.
Methods The study employs a stepped-wedge realist trial over six months in the CMCH medicine wards (13, 14, and 16). It involves adult patients, family caregivers, health workers (nurses, doctors, and ward assistants), and hospital administrators. Family caregivers will receive training to support their participation in hospital care, while nurses and doctors will be trained to deliver these sessions. The training will include an introduction to the hospital, basic hospital care, oral medication administration, detection of warning signs, handover between family caregivers, and discharge preparation. The primary outcomes are reduced family caregiver strain and lower health worker workload. Patient-family caregiver dyads will be followed daily for up to five days during admission and one call after discharge. Health workers will be followed throughout the study period. In addition, ward-level, implementation, feasibility, and acceptability outcomes will be collected. Some patients, family caregivers, health workers, and hospital administrators will be included in realist interviews or focus group discussions. The analysis will integrate mixed-effects modelling with a realist evaluation approach.
Discussion This study will add a foundational piece of research to the family participation field, in resource-limited and -rich settings. It builds on the shared journey of this growing international research collaboration. No such previous research has been performed. It will be the first to test a co-created family participation training intervention in hospital care. In addition, it suggests new research methods by integrating a stepped-wedge design with a realist evaluation.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard care | No Intervention | Control: Hospital care as usual. | |
| Family Caregiver Training | Experimental | Intervention: Family Caregiver Training in hospital. |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Family Caregiver Training | Behavioral | This study will test a family participation training intervention. Family caregivers will receive training on participating in hospital care while nurses and doctors receive training to train family caregivers. The family caregiver training sessions will be delivered during the intervention period in three wards to all family caregivers willing to attend the training session. The intervention has been co-created and piloted with patients, family caregivers, health workers, and hospital administrators. The content of the training will include an introduction to the hospital environment, basic care tasks, warning sign detection, oral medication administration, caregiver handover, and discharge preparedness. The content of the family caregiver training will be bundled in a visual poster. These posters will be hung on the walls across the medicine wards at the patients' bedsides. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Family Caregiver: Strain | Measured with Care-related Quality of Life (CarerQOL), ranging from 0 (worst care situation) to 100 (best care situation) | During 5 day hospital follow-up |
| Health Worker: Workload | Nasa Task Load Index, ranging from 0 (low workload) to 10 (high workload) | Assessed from inclusion till study end for at least once per study period across four periods, spanning five months in total |
| Refined Programme Theories from the Realist Evaluation | The refined programme theories will be developed through iterative analysis of qualitative and quantitative data, outlining what works in the intervention, for whom, and under what circumstances. | Continuous refinement from start of the intervention till end of the study, spanning four months in total |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Family Caregiver: Workload | Nasa Task Load Index, ranging from 0 (low workload) to 10 (high workload) | During 5 day hospital follow-up |
| Family Caregiver: Caregiving Tasks Performed During Hospitalisation |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Patient: Satisfaction with Hospital Care | Adapted and shortened HCAHPS (Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) Survey, measured on a four and ten point scale | During 5 day hospital follow-up |
| Patient: Anxiety and Depression |
Inclusion Criteria:
All study parts
Population
Adult
- Age: ≥18 years
Data collection specific Patient and family caregiver data collection - Patient & family caregiver dyad: admitted for ≤24 hours on the medicine wards
Health worker data collection
- Employment: working on one of the medicine wards for at least one week
Interviews, focus group discussions and observations
During the intervention period
Exclusion Criteria:
All
Language - Unable to speak Bengali, Chittagonian or English
Consent
Data collection specific Patient and family caregiver data collection
- Patient: Planned discharge ≤24 hours of admission to the medicine ward
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Michèle van Vugt, Prof. Dr. | Amsterdam University Medical Center | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chittagong Medical College Hospital | Chittagong | Bangladesh |
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| UNKNOWN |
| Mixit | UNKNOWN |
| Amsterdam UMC | OTHER |
Stepped-wedge trial
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Unable to mask a training intervention.
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Daily collection of which caregiving tasks were performed in the past 24 hours by the main family caregiver, other family caregivers and the patient themselves.
| During 5 day hospital follow-up |
| Family Caregiver: Readiness for Discharge | The caregiver is asked daily how ready they would be to provide care at home if their relative would be discharged today. | During 5 day hospital follow-up |
| Family Caregiver: Satisfaction with Hospital Care | Adapted and shortened HCAHPS (Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) Survey, measured on a four and ten point scale | During 5 day hospital follow-up and at 14 day call |
| Health Worker: Families' Importance in Nursing Care | Using the Families' Importance in Nursing Care - Nurses' Attitudes (FINC-NA), measured on a five point scale | Assessed from inclusion till study end for at least once per study period across four periods, spanning five months in total |
| Health Worker: Interruptions | Health workers are asked about their perceived increase or decrease in interruptions during work by family caregivers | Assessed from inclusion till study end for at least once per study period across four periods, spanning five months in total |
Patient Health Questionnaire-4 (PHQ-4), measured on a four point scale
| During 5 day hospital follow-up |
| Patient: Readiness for Discharge | Patient Readiness for Discharge Scale, measured from 0 (worst) to 10 (best) readiness | During 5 day hospital follow-up |
| Patient: Medication Adherence | Pill counts | During 5 day hospital follow-up |
| Patient: Hospitalisation Outcomes | Outcome of hospital admission: discharged home alive, left against medical advice, in another hospital, died in hospital, discharged home to die, in ICU, in another ward, still in the medicine ward, lost to follow-up. | During 5 day hospital follow-up and 14 day call |
| Implementation: Reach | Training logs recording all family caregivers and patients trained | Continuous data collection from the start of the intervention until the end of the study (four months in total). |
| Implementation: Adoption | Uptake of the intervention by health workers and the ward. | Continuous data collection from the start of the intervention until the end of the study (four months in total). |
| Implementation: Fidelity | Fidelity sheets of the training sessions | Continuous data collection from the start of the intervention until the end of the study (four months in total). |
| Implementation: Adaptions | Modifications made during implementation of the intervention | Continuous data collection from the start of the intervention until the end of the study (four months in total). |
| Implementation: Cost of the Intervention | Resources required to deliver the intervention | Continuous data collection from the start of the intervention until the end of the study (four months in total). |
| Feasibility & Acceptability | Qualitative assessment of integration of the training intervention into the health worker and ward workflow, resource feasibility of the intervention, buy-in from stakeholders and feasibility of the research methods for this intervention type. | Continuous data collection from the start of the intervention until the end of the study (four months in total). |