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Two concurrent randomized controlled trials of CommunityRx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care

BACKGROUND: CommunityRx is an evidence-based social care intervention delivered to family and friend caregivers (“caregivers”) at the point of healthcare to address health-related social risks (HRSRs). CommunityRx-Hunger is a double-blind randomized controlled trial (RCT) that enrolls caregivers of...

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Autores principales: Abramsohn, Emily Marie, De Ornelas, MariaDelSol, Borson, Soo, Frazier, Cristianne RM, Fuller, Charles M, Grana, Mellissa, Huang, Elbert S, Jagai, Jyotsna S, Makelarski, Jennifer A, Miller, Doriane, Schulman-Green, Dena, Shiu, Eva, Thompson, Katherine, Winslow, Victoria, Wroblewski, Kristen, Lindau, Stacy Tessler
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Journal Experts 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10002827/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36909590
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2464681/v1
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author Abramsohn, Emily Marie
De Ornelas, MariaDelSol
Borson, Soo
Frazier, Cristianne RM
Fuller, Charles M
Grana, Mellissa
Huang, Elbert S
Jagai, Jyotsna S
Makelarski, Jennifer A
Miller, Doriane
Schulman-Green, Dena
Shiu, Eva
Thompson, Katherine
Winslow, Victoria
Wroblewski, Kristen
Lindau, Stacy Tessler
author_facet Abramsohn, Emily Marie
De Ornelas, MariaDelSol
Borson, Soo
Frazier, Cristianne RM
Fuller, Charles M
Grana, Mellissa
Huang, Elbert S
Jagai, Jyotsna S
Makelarski, Jennifer A
Miller, Doriane
Schulman-Green, Dena
Shiu, Eva
Thompson, Katherine
Winslow, Victoria
Wroblewski, Kristen
Lindau, Stacy Tessler
author_sort Abramsohn, Emily Marie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: CommunityRx is an evidence-based social care intervention delivered to family and friend caregivers (“caregivers”) at the point of healthcare to address health-related social risks (HRSRs). CommunityRx-Hunger is a double-blind randomized controlled trial (RCT) that enrolls caregivers of hospitalized children. CommunityRx-Dementia is a single-blind RCT that enrolls caregivers of community-residing people with dementia. Clinical trials that enroll caregivers face recruitment barriers, including caregiver burden and lack of systematic strategies to identify and track caregivers. COVID-19 pandemic-related visitor restrictions exacerbated these barriers and prompted the need for iteration of the CommunityRx protocols from in-person to remote operations. This study describes the novel methods used to iterate existing RCT protocols and factors contributing to their successful iteration. METHODS: CommunityRx uses individual-level data to generate personalized community resource referrals for basic, health and caregiving needs. Our research program uses an asset-based, community-engaged approach including study-specific community advisory boards (CABs). In early 2020, both RCT protocols were pre-tested in-person. In March 2020, when pandemic conditions prohibited enrollment during clinical encounters, both protocols were iterated to efficient, caregiver-centered remote operations. Iterations were enabled in part by the Automated Randomized Controlled Trial Information-Communication System (ARCTICS), a trial management system innovation engineered to integrate the data collection database (REDCap) with community resource referral (NowPow) and SMS texting (Mosio) platforms. RESULTS: Enabled by engaged CABs and ARCTICS, both RCTs quickly adapted to remote operations. Designed before the pandemic, we had planned to launch both trials by March 2020 and complete enrollment by December 2021. The pandemic postponed launch until November (CommunityRx-Hunger) and December (CommunityRx-Dementia) 2020. Despite the delay, 65% of all planned participants (CommunityRx-Hunger n = 417/640; CommunityRx-Dementia n = 222/344) were enrolled by December 2021, halfway through our projected enrollment timeline. Both trials enrolled 13% more participants in 12 months than originally projected in-person. CONCLUSIONS: Our asset-based, community-engaged approach combined with widely accessible institutional and commercial information technologies facilitated rapid migration to remote trial operations. Remote or hybrid RCT designs for social care interventions may be a viable, scalable alternative to in-person recruitment and intervention delivery protocols, particularly for caregivers and other groups that are under-represented in traditional health services research. TRIAL STATUS: Both studies are registered on ClinicalTrials.gov: CommunityRx-Hunger (NCT04171999); CommunityRx for Caregivers (NCT04146545); My Diabetes My Community (NCT04970810)
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spelling pubmed-100028272023-03-11 Two concurrent randomized controlled trials of CommunityRx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care Abramsohn, Emily Marie De Ornelas, MariaDelSol Borson, Soo Frazier, Cristianne RM Fuller, Charles M Grana, Mellissa Huang, Elbert S Jagai, Jyotsna S Makelarski, Jennifer A Miller, Doriane Schulman-Green, Dena Shiu, Eva Thompson, Katherine Winslow, Victoria Wroblewski, Kristen Lindau, Stacy Tessler Res Sq Article BACKGROUND: CommunityRx is an evidence-based social care intervention delivered to family and friend caregivers (“caregivers”) at the point of healthcare to address health-related social risks (HRSRs). CommunityRx-Hunger is a double-blind randomized controlled trial (RCT) that enrolls caregivers of hospitalized children. CommunityRx-Dementia is a single-blind RCT that enrolls caregivers of community-residing people with dementia. Clinical trials that enroll caregivers face recruitment barriers, including caregiver burden and lack of systematic strategies to identify and track caregivers. COVID-19 pandemic-related visitor restrictions exacerbated these barriers and prompted the need for iteration of the CommunityRx protocols from in-person to remote operations. This study describes the novel methods used to iterate existing RCT protocols and factors contributing to their successful iteration. METHODS: CommunityRx uses individual-level data to generate personalized community resource referrals for basic, health and caregiving needs. Our research program uses an asset-based, community-engaged approach including study-specific community advisory boards (CABs). In early 2020, both RCT protocols were pre-tested in-person. In March 2020, when pandemic conditions prohibited enrollment during clinical encounters, both protocols were iterated to efficient, caregiver-centered remote operations. Iterations were enabled in part by the Automated Randomized Controlled Trial Information-Communication System (ARCTICS), a trial management system innovation engineered to integrate the data collection database (REDCap) with community resource referral (NowPow) and SMS texting (Mosio) platforms. RESULTS: Enabled by engaged CABs and ARCTICS, both RCTs quickly adapted to remote operations. Designed before the pandemic, we had planned to launch both trials by March 2020 and complete enrollment by December 2021. The pandemic postponed launch until November (CommunityRx-Hunger) and December (CommunityRx-Dementia) 2020. Despite the delay, 65% of all planned participants (CommunityRx-Hunger n = 417/640; CommunityRx-Dementia n = 222/344) were enrolled by December 2021, halfway through our projected enrollment timeline. Both trials enrolled 13% more participants in 12 months than originally projected in-person. CONCLUSIONS: Our asset-based, community-engaged approach combined with widely accessible institutional and commercial information technologies facilitated rapid migration to remote trial operations. Remote or hybrid RCT designs for social care interventions may be a viable, scalable alternative to in-person recruitment and intervention delivery protocols, particularly for caregivers and other groups that are under-represented in traditional health services research. TRIAL STATUS: Both studies are registered on ClinicalTrials.gov: CommunityRx-Hunger (NCT04171999); CommunityRx for Caregivers (NCT04146545); My Diabetes My Community (NCT04970810) American Journal Experts 2023-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10002827/ /pubmed/36909590 http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2464681/v1 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Abramsohn, Emily Marie
De Ornelas, MariaDelSol
Borson, Soo
Frazier, Cristianne RM
Fuller, Charles M
Grana, Mellissa
Huang, Elbert S
Jagai, Jyotsna S
Makelarski, Jennifer A
Miller, Doriane
Schulman-Green, Dena
Shiu, Eva
Thompson, Katherine
Winslow, Victoria
Wroblewski, Kristen
Lindau, Stacy Tessler
Two concurrent randomized controlled trials of CommunityRx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care
title Two concurrent randomized controlled trials of CommunityRx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care
title_full Two concurrent randomized controlled trials of CommunityRx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care
title_fullStr Two concurrent randomized controlled trials of CommunityRx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care
title_full_unstemmed Two concurrent randomized controlled trials of CommunityRx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care
title_short Two concurrent randomized controlled trials of CommunityRx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care
title_sort two concurrent randomized controlled trials of communityrx, a social care intervention for family and friend caregivers delivered at the point of care
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10002827/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36909590
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2464681/v1
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