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The Effects of Guided Care on the Perceived Quality of Health Care for Multi-morbid Older Persons: 18-Month Outcomes from a Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial
Authors:Cynthia M. Boyd MD   MPH  Lisa Reider MHS  Katherine Frey MPH  Daniel Scharfstein ScD  Bruce Leff MD  Jennifer Wolff PhD  Carol Groves RN   MPA  Lya Karm MD  Stephen Wegener PhD  Jill Marsteller MPP   PhD  Chad Boult MD   MPH   MBA
Affiliation:1. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
2. Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA
4. Center on Aging and Health, 5200 Eastern Avenue, Mason F. Lord Building, Center Tower, 7th Floor, Baltimore, MD, 21224, USA
3. Kaiser-Permanente Mid-Atlantic States, Rockville, MD, USA
Abstract:

BACKGROUND

The quality of health care for older Americans with chronic conditions is suboptimal.

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate the effects of “Guided Care” on patient-reported quality of chronic illness care.

DESIGN

Cluster-randomized controlled trial of Guided Care in 14 primary care teams.

PARTICIPANTS

Older patients of these teams were eligible to participate if, based on analysis of their recent insurance claims, they were at risk for incurring high health-care costs during the coming year. Small teams of physicians and their at-risk older patients were randomized to receive either Guided Care (GC) or usual care (UC).

INTERVENTION

“Guided Care” is designed to enhance the quality of health care by integrating a registered nurse, trained in chronic care, into a primary care practice to work with 2–5 physicians in providing comprehensive chronic care to 50–60 multi-morbid older patients.

MEASUREMENTS

Eighteen months after baseline, interviewers blinded to group assignment administered the Patient Assessment of Chronic Illness Care (PACIC) survey by telephone. Logistic and linear regression was used to evaluate the effect of the intervention on patient-reported quality of chronic illness care.

RESULTS

Of the 13,534 older patients screened, 2,391 (17.7%) were eligible to participate in the study, of which 904 (37.8%) gave informed consent and were cluster-randomized. After 18 months, 95.3% and 92.2% of the GC and UC recipients who remained alive and eligible completed interviews. Compared to UC recipients, GC recipients had twice greater odds of rating their chronic care highly (aOR = 2.13, 95% CI = 1.30–3.50, p = 0.003).

CONCLUSION

Guided Care improves self-reported quality of chronic health care for multi-morbid older persons.KEY WORDS: quality of care, chronic illness, older
Keywords:
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