Trauma Medical Home for Older Injured Patients



Status:Recruiting
Healthy:No
Age Range:50 - Any
Updated:2/10/2019
Start Date:October 1, 2017
End Date:December 21, 2025
Contact:Ben Zarzaur, MD, MPH
Email:bzarzaur@iupui.edu
Phone:317-962-5317

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Collaborative Care for the Older Injured Patient: A Trauma Medical Home

This proposal aims to conduct a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of a
6-month collaborative care intervention in improving the functional and psychological
recovery of 430 injury survivors 50 and older. The trial has the following specific aims: 1)
Evaluate the ability of the TMH intervention to improve the physical recovery of older injury
survivors; and 2) Evaluate the ability of the TMH intervention to improve the psychological
recovery of older injury survivors; and 3) Evaluate the ability of the TMH intervention to
reduce healthcare costs of older injury survivors and evaluate the cost of effectiveness of
the TMH intervention.

Despite the potential for full recovery surprisingly few older injury survivors are able to
realize maximal recovery of function and quality of life after injury due to fragmentation of
care delivery and lack of focus on psychological symptoms in the early post-injury period.
Older injured adults are at particular risk of death and disability after injury. Thus, a
fundamental gap in knowledge exists regarding the best way to enhance the recovery of injury
survivors. The continued existence of this gap is an important problem because unless it is
filled, injury survivors will continue to suffer from potentially reversible impairments of
health and well-being. The long-term goal of this line of research is to improve the health
and quality of care for injured patients. Indiana University School of Medicine researchers
have over 20 years of experience developing innovative and effective collaborative care
models that integrate with primary care and specialty physicians to address the complex
biopsychosocial needs of patients with chronic disease states, such as dementia and
depression. Based on these successes, an interdisciplinary team of clinical investigators at
Indiana University revised the collaborative care model to meet the needs of injury survivors
who are in an active recovery state. This injury specific collaborative care model is called
the Trauma Medical Home (TMH). This proposal aims to conduct a randomized controlled trial to
evaluate the efficacy of a 6-month collaborative care intervention in improving the
functional and psychological recovery of 430 injury survivors 50 and older. The trial has the
following specific aims: 1) Evaluate the ability of the TMH intervention to improve the
physical recovery of older injury survivors; and 2) Evaluate the ability of the TMH
intervention to improve the psychological recovery of older injury survivors; and 3) Evaluate
the ability of the TMH intervention to reduce healthcare costs of older injury survivors and
evaluate the cost of effectiveness of the TMH intervention. The research proposed in this
application is innovative, in our opinion, because it represents a new and substantive
departure from the status quo. Previous collaborative care models focused on chronic care
management and they lack rapid adaptability. Because the recovery trajectory of injured
patients is dynamic and changes quickly, the innovations in this proposal have to do with
providing real-time feedback to a care coordinator that will allow the care coordinator to
adjust an injury specific collaborative care protocol to meet the needs of the injured as
they move through the dynamic recovery period after injury. This contribution will be
significant as broad application of the Trauma Medical Home in trauma centers and trauma
systems nationwide could result in better health and improved quality of post-injury care for
older injured patients. Improved physical health and fewer psychological symptoms, will
likely result in better overall functional ability, the increased ability to return to work
and less reliance on family, social, and health care resources.

Inclusion Criteria:

1. English-speaking adult age 50 years and older;

2. admitted to Indiana University Health - Methodist or Eskenazi Health hospitals;

3. able to provide consent or has a legally authorized representative to provide consent;

4. access to a telephone;

5. and an injury severity score (ISS) of 9 or greater.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. have a self-reported diagnosis of cancer with short life expectancy;

2. have a history of dementing illnesses and other neurodegenerative disease such as
Alzheimer disease, Parkinson disease, or vascular dementia;

3. have a significant traumatic brain injury (defined as the presence of any intracranial
blood on Computed Tomography scan of the head or best Glasgow Coma Scale Score of less
than 13 at the time of study enrollment);

4. have any spinal cord injury with persistent neurologic deficit at the time of study
enrollment;

5. are pregnant women (assessed by a urine pregnancy test);

6. have a primary residence outside the state of Indiana;

7. are incarcerated at the time of study enrollment;

8. have an acute stroke upon admission or develop a stroke as a new event during the
course of hospitalization;

9. unable to complete study questionnaire due to severe hearing loss;

10. recent history of alcohol or substance abuse;

11. discharged to a permanent care facility;

12. admitted with a burn affecting >10% total body surface area.
We found this trial at
3
sites
Indianapolis, Indiana 46202
Phone: 317-962-5317
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Indianapolis, Indiana 46202
Phone: 317-962-5317
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Indianapolis, IN
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Indianapolis, Indiana 46260
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Indianapolis, IN
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