3 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
Development and pilot testing of a clinician coaching communication intervention to improve communication between medical teams and caregivers (parents, family members) of children in the hospital. Our team is specifically focused on improving partnership, respect, and collaboration with Black and Latinx caregivers of children in the hospital by incorporating elements from trauma-informed care and racial equity into a communication intervention. The investigators will explore the impact of this intervention on communication quality, caregiver trust, caregiver satisfaction, and hospital readmissions.
Background. Hospitalists predominantly engaged in inpatient care constitute a fundamental, poorly assessed change in medical care. The University of Texas Houston Pediatrics Department is developing a Hospitalist Division to staff Children's Memorial Hermann Hospital. Demonstration of its benefits and cost-effectiveness is important to secure adequate, sustained hospital or 3rd-party reimbursement. Design. Prospective step wedged quality improvement (QI) study with pediatric hospitalists sequentially assuming 24/7 responsibility for each of the 4 pediatric inpatient services over 2-3 years. This design allows within- and between-group analyses and is particularly desirable for evaluating interventions likely to be beneficial that will be given stepwise to an increasing % of patients. Intervention. Faculty of the new Pediatric Hospitalist Division will initially become responsible 24/7 for 1-2 of the 4 services now staffed by the General Pediatric Division. Currently, each pediatric service admits every other patient without regard to diagnosis, resulting in quasi-random patient assignment. Outcomes: Total hospital days (including 30-day readmissions); intubation; pediatric intensive care unit (ICU) admissions; parent, nurse, and resident satisfaction; and costs assessed using state-of-the-art methods and expressed from the health system, medical school, and hospital perspectives. Hypotheses. Hospitalists will improve clinical outcomes and parent, nurse, and resident satisfaction and be cost-effective (primary outcome), assessed by net cost or savings per hospital day prevented (health system perspective). Analyses. Frequentist and Bayesian analyses to assess the probability of benefit and of cost-effectiveness.
This study will investigate stress that parents of children admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) experience. Investigation of a novel intervention of using bilateral alternating stimulation to reduce parental stress and anxiety and increase bonding/attachment in NICU. Evaluate parental stress and feelings of bonding using surveys before and after the intervention. Intervention will be done at neonate's bedside while admitted to the NICU. Vital sign data will be collected as a marker of parent and neonate's stress response during the intervention.