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| Funder | AGENCY FOR HEALTHCARE RESEARCH AND QUALITY |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of Wisconsin-Madison |
| Country | United States |
| Start Date | Sep 30, 2021 |
| End Date | Aug 31, 2026 |
| Duration | 1,796 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Principal Investigator |
| Data Source | NIH (US) |
| Grant ID | 10686005 |
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Falls are the leading traumatic cause of both injury and death among older adults. American emergency departments (EDs) see over 3 million fall victims yearly, yet they play little role in primary or secondary fall prevention. The ED is an ideal site to identify patients at risk of future falls, however in this setting preventive
care cannot be implemented at the expense of the primary mission of the ED: the provision of emergency care in a time-pressured environment. As the population ages, and the ED continues to expand its role as the primary site for delivery of acute unscheduled care, there is an urgent need to create a scalable intervention to assess
older adults for fall risk and link them to appropriate risk reduction interventions after discharge without adding additional workload for nurses or physicians. Through an AHRQ K08, our study team has developed and validated an innovative automated screening and referral intervention for fall risk. This intervention harnesses existing data to select and connect patients to
appropriate primary and secondary prevention services after ED visits without adding burden to nurse or physician workloads. This intervention features smart use of automation for screening and referral tasks maintaining physician decision autonomy, as well as the unique ability to adjust referral rates based on clinic
availability. This intervention features smart use of automation for screening and referral tasks maintaining physician decision autonomy, as well as the unique ability to adjust referral rates based on clinic availability. Based on our work, UW Health is currently piloting the intervention, and has committed to implementing it at
three diverse ED sites. This study will adapt the intervention for implementation at additional sites, and investigates the implementation and effectiveness of the automated screening and referral process in all three EDs through three specific aims: 1) Adapt the design of an automated screening and referral intervention for
implementation in three diverse ED settings, using a human factors approach. 2) Test the effectiveness of the automated screening and referral intervention on both completed referrals to a multidisciplinary fall prevention clinic and rates of injurious falls using EHR data generated during implementation. 3) Evaluate implementation
of the automated screening and referral intervention in three diverse ED sites using a mixed methods approach. This grant proposal builds upon our previous innovative work developing both CDS and risk- stratification algorithms to improve the quality and safety of care delivered to older adult ED patients. We will
address the urgent and growing need for a scalable strategy for fall risk reduction from the ED by demonstrating the effectiveness of our novel approach in a study spanning diverse hospital types and patient populations. Furthermore, knowledge gained from this work will inform other use cases which could benefit from automated
risk-stratification and care coordination in the ED and beyond.
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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