Rationale and methods of an Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple Ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Abstract Background Frequent users of emergency medical services for issues that could be more appropriately managed through non-urgent care deplete the limited resources of the health-care system. Community paramedicine is an emerging field that extends the role of paramedics beyond the traditional...

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Main Authors: Gina Agarwal, Melissa Pirrie, Brent McLeod, Ricardo Angeles, Walter Tavares, Francine Marzanek, Lehana Thabane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-01-01
Series:Trials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13063-018-3107-4
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spelling doaj-99759f0bef5e4a83b63566b010c086382020-11-25T03:00:52ZengBMCTrials1745-62152019-01-0120111110.1186/s13063-018-3107-4Rationale and methods of an Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple Ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trialGina Agarwal0Melissa Pirrie1Brent McLeod2Ricardo Angeles3Walter Tavares4Francine Marzanek5Lehana Thabane6Department of Family Medicine, McMaster UniversityDepartment of Family Medicine, McMaster UniversityHamilton Paramedic ServicesDepartment of Family Medicine, McMaster UniversityThe Wilson Centre, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto/University Health NetworkDepartment of Family Medicine, McMaster UniversityDepartment of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster UniversityAbstract Background Frequent users of emergency medical services for issues that could be more appropriately managed through non-urgent care deplete the limited resources of the health-care system. Community paramedicine is an emerging field that extends the role of paramedics beyond the traditional emergency response. The goal of the current study is to evaluate the impact of a community paramedicine home-visit intervention with frequent users on reducing ambulance calls, hospital visits, and admissions. The study will also provide a cross-sectional description of the characteristics of frequent users of emergency medical services. Methods/design An open-label, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial with parallel intervention and control groups will be conducted in four paramedic services in Ontario. The sample size has been calculated as 261 per group for a 25% reduction in ambulance calls. Eligible participants will be frequent callers (three or more calls in 6 months), individuals who call for at least one lift assist, or individuals referred to the program by a paramedic. Individuals will be randomly allocated to receive either the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program intervention or their usual care (control). Intervention participants will receive up to three visits from a community paramedic, who will conduct health risk assessments, provide health promotion and education, provide referrals to local resources, and fax reports back to the family physician. Data will be collected from administrative databases (e.g., paramedic services), a custom CP@home program database, participant surveys, and key informant interviews. An intention-to-treat analysis will be conducted, including descriptive statistics and multi-level modeling to find factors predictive of primary and secondary outcomes. A thematic analysis will be used to analyze the qualitative outcomes. An economic analysis will consider the cost-effectiveness of the program. Discussion CP@home has the potential to reduce the health-care system burden significantly by targeting current frequent users of emergency medical services. By targeting this population, CP@home aims to decrease ambulance calls and emergency department visits, reducing health-care costs and improving the quality of life of a vulnerable population. If successful, CP@home will inform the development of community paramedicine policies and the expanding role of paramedics in regions across Canada. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02835989. Registered on July 14 2016.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13063-018-3107-4Community paramedicineHealth-care Utilizationemergency medical servicesprimary careseniorscomplex needs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gina Agarwal
Melissa Pirrie
Brent McLeod
Ricardo Angeles
Walter Tavares
Francine Marzanek
Lehana Thabane
spellingShingle Gina Agarwal
Melissa Pirrie
Brent McLeod
Ricardo Angeles
Walter Tavares
Francine Marzanek
Lehana Thabane
Rationale and methods of an Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple Ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Trials
Community paramedicine
Health-care Utilization
emergency medical services
primary care
seniors
complex needs
author_facet Gina Agarwal
Melissa Pirrie
Brent McLeod
Ricardo Angeles
Walter Tavares
Francine Marzanek
Lehana Thabane
author_sort Gina Agarwal
title Rationale and methods of an Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple Ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
title_short Rationale and methods of an Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple Ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
title_full Rationale and methods of an Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple Ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
title_fullStr Rationale and methods of an Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple Ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Rationale and methods of an Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple Ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
title_sort rationale and methods of an evaluation of the effectiveness of the community paramedicine at home (cp@home) program for frequent users of emergency medical services in multiple ontario regions: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
publisher BMC
series Trials
issn 1745-6215
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Abstract Background Frequent users of emergency medical services for issues that could be more appropriately managed through non-urgent care deplete the limited resources of the health-care system. Community paramedicine is an emerging field that extends the role of paramedics beyond the traditional emergency response. The goal of the current study is to evaluate the impact of a community paramedicine home-visit intervention with frequent users on reducing ambulance calls, hospital visits, and admissions. The study will also provide a cross-sectional description of the characteristics of frequent users of emergency medical services. Methods/design An open-label, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial with parallel intervention and control groups will be conducted in four paramedic services in Ontario. The sample size has been calculated as 261 per group for a 25% reduction in ambulance calls. Eligible participants will be frequent callers (three or more calls in 6 months), individuals who call for at least one lift assist, or individuals referred to the program by a paramedic. Individuals will be randomly allocated to receive either the Community Paramedicine at Home (CP@home) program intervention or their usual care (control). Intervention participants will receive up to three visits from a community paramedic, who will conduct health risk assessments, provide health promotion and education, provide referrals to local resources, and fax reports back to the family physician. Data will be collected from administrative databases (e.g., paramedic services), a custom CP@home program database, participant surveys, and key informant interviews. An intention-to-treat analysis will be conducted, including descriptive statistics and multi-level modeling to find factors predictive of primary and secondary outcomes. A thematic analysis will be used to analyze the qualitative outcomes. An economic analysis will consider the cost-effectiveness of the program. Discussion CP@home has the potential to reduce the health-care system burden significantly by targeting current frequent users of emergency medical services. By targeting this population, CP@home aims to decrease ambulance calls and emergency department visits, reducing health-care costs and improving the quality of life of a vulnerable population. If successful, CP@home will inform the development of community paramedicine policies and the expanding role of paramedics in regions across Canada. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02835989. Registered on July 14 2016.
topic Community paramedicine
Health-care Utilization
emergency medical services
primary care
seniors
complex needs
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13063-018-3107-4
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