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IIR 22-163 – HSR Study

 
IIR 22-163
Implementing a Decision Support Tool to prevent Community-Acquired Pressure Injury in Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) in the Spinal Cord Injury Clinic
Elizabeth E Burkhart, PhD
Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital, Hines, IL
Hines, IL
Funding Period: August 2024 - July 2028
Portfolio Assignment: Health Care Organization and Implementation

Abstract

Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a permanent condition affecting every aspect of life including health, daily activities, and participation and quality of life. Persons with SCI are at high risk of pressure injury (PrI) throughout their lives due to loss of sensation, nerve damage and immobility. PrIs are local areas of damage to the skin and underlying soft tissue caused by pressure and shear commonly located over bony prominences. While most PrIs are hospital- or nursing home-acquired, in people with SCI, PrIs typically develop in the community. Community-acquired pressure injuries (CAPrIs) are common, devastating, and costly. This grant proposal is a type 1 hybrid stepped wedge randomized design at six additional SCI Clinics to assess the efficacy and implementation of a decision support tool, called the Community Acquired Pressure Injury Prevention Field Implementation Tool (CAPP-FIT) previously developed and piloted at one site. The CAPP-FIT includes: 1) a Veteran survey to identify risks, actions, and resources needed to prevent CAPrIs and 2) a companion Provider Report immediately available in print or downloaded into the electronic health record listing Veteran responses to survey items with recommended evidence-based provider actions. The Veteran survey can be completed at home via a secured email or by using an iPad in the clinic. There are three aims in the proposal, guided by the RE-AIM framework. Aim 1 is implementing the CAPP-FIT at the seven geographically diverse VA SCI clinics, including workflow redesign, provider training, and evaluation of provider readiness. The CAPP-FIT will be implemented in a staggered fashion consistent with the stepped wedge design. After CAPP-FIT implementation, each site will determine how the CAPP-FIT will be maintained in clinical practice to support sustainability (maintenance phase). Aim 2 assesses efficacy, assessing provider and Veteran satisfaction in CAPrI use, new CAPrI incidence for 6 months post-initial CAPP-FIT implementation, and overall and CAPrI-associated hospitalizations. Aim 3 assesses implementation using RE-AIM. Reach is the proportion of providers and Veterans participating in the intervention. Adoption is assessed by the proportion of Veteran-identified modifiable risk factors acted upon by SCI providers, as well as a comparison of non-modifiable risk factors of participating and non-participating VA SCI clinics. Implementation is assessed by describing completed CAPP-FITs during implementation, describing Veteran CAPrI risk factors, and describing provider identified facilitators and barriers to implementation. Maintenance is assessed by describing how each clinic will continue to integrate CAPP-FIT into workflow and by describing the number of providers using the CAPP-FIT during maintenance phase.

External Links for this Project

NIH Reporter

Grant Number: I01HX003704-01A2
Link: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10862256



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PUBLICATIONS:

None at this time.

DRA: Health Systems Science, Acute and Combat-Related Injury, Brain and Spinal Cord Injuries and Disorders
DRE: TRL - Applied/Translational, Prevention
Keywords: None at this time.
MeSH Terms: None at this time.

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