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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 5/2013

01-05-2013 | Original Research

A Matched-Pair Cluster-Randomized Trial of Guided Care for High-Risk Older Patients

Authors: Chad Boult, MD, MPH, MBA, Bruce Leff, MD, Cynthia M. Boyd, MD, MPH, Jennifer L. Wolff, PhD, Jill A. Marsteller, PhD, MPP, Kevin D. Frick, PhD, Stephen Wegener, PhD, Lisa Reider, MHS, Katherine Frey, MPH, BSN, Tracy M. Mroz, MS, OTR/L, Lya Karm, MD, Daniel O. Scharfstein, ScD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 5/2013

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ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND

Patients at risk for generating high health care expenditures often receive fragmented, low-quality, inefficient health care. Guided Care is designed to provide proactive, coordinated, comprehensive care for such patients.

OBJECTIVE

We hypothesized that Guided Care, compared to usual care, produces better functional health and quality of care, while reducing the use of expensive health services.

DESIGN

32-month, single-blind, matched-pair, cluster-randomized controlled trial of Guided Care, conducted in eight community-based primary care practices.

PATIENTS

The “Hierarchical Condition Category” (HCC) predictive model was used to identify high-risk older patients who were insured by fee-for-service Medicare, a Medicare Advantage plan or Tricare. Patients with HCC scores in the highest quartile (at risk for generating high health care expenditures during the coming year) were eligible to participate.

INTERVENTION

A registered nurse collaborated with two to five primary care physicians in providing eight services to participants: comprehensive assessment, evidence-based care planning, proactive monitoring, care coordination, transitional care, coaching for self-management, caregiver support, and access to community-based services.

MAIN MEASURES

Functional health was measured using the Short Form–36. Quality of care and health services utilization were measured using the Patient Assessment of Chronic Illness Care and health insurance claims, respectively.

KEY RESULTS

Of the eligible patients, 904 (37.8 %) gave written consent to participate; of these, 477 (52.8 %) completed the final interview, and 848 (93.8 %) provided complete claims data. In intention-to-treat analyses, Guided Care did not significantly improve participants’ functional health, but it was associated with significantly higher participant ratings of the quality of care (difference = 0.27, 95 % CI = 0.08–0.45) and 29 % lower use of home care (95 % CI = 3–48 %).

CONCLUSIONS

Guided Care improves high-risk older patients’ ratings of the quality of their care, and it reduces their use of home care, but it does not appear to improve their functional health.
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Metadata
Title
A Matched-Pair Cluster-Randomized Trial of Guided Care for High-Risk Older Patients
Authors
Chad Boult, MD, MPH, MBA
Bruce Leff, MD
Cynthia M. Boyd, MD, MPH
Jennifer L. Wolff, PhD
Jill A. Marsteller, PhD, MPP
Kevin D. Frick, PhD
Stephen Wegener, PhD
Lisa Reider, MHS
Katherine Frey, MPH, BSN
Tracy M. Mroz, MS, OTR/L
Lya Karm, MD
Daniel O. Scharfstein, ScD
Publication date
01-05-2013
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 5/2013
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-012-2287-y

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