Using Point-of-Care Video Prescriptions to Improve Aftercare Following Discharge From a Pediatric Emergency Department
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Hospital |
Therapuetic Areas: | Other |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | Any - 18 |
Updated: | 4/2/2016 |
Start Date: | January 2012 |
End Date: | December 2013 |
Optimizing Emergency Aftercare With Mobile Video Prescriptions
The goal of this project is to develop the content and delivery platform that electronically
distributes mobile video discharge education for underserved populations and to demonstrate
utilization, satisfaction, and improved health outcomes.
distributes mobile video discharge education for underserved populations and to demonstrate
utilization, satisfaction, and improved health outcomes.
Emergency department (ED) visits have increased by 25% over the past decade. 85% of these
patients are discharged, and the standard of care is to provide each patient/caregiver with
written instructions that highlight how to care for a particular illness at home and signs
to return to the hospital. Compliance with such ED discharge instructions is limited,
leading to suboptimal medical care and unnecessary return visits to the ED. Inadequate
health literacy, language disparities, and poor comprehension of written discharge
information contribute to this problem. This health gap is more prevalent in children of
young parents, low-income families, and minority populations where a disproportionate number
of patients visit the ED for non-emergent care, often because of a lack of health education.
The ED environment is chaotic and distracting and suboptimal to educate patients. Such
education is best accomplished where aftercare occurs—in the home, but many patients lack
direction and motivation to seek reliable sources of focused health education.
healthEworks LLC has developed Video Prescriptions™ - concise 3-5 minute video modules
specific to the most common discharge diagnoses that patients receive in the ED. Further
work is needed to develop a professional, diagnosis-specific product. These videos will
feature Dr. Christina Johns, an emergency physician who specializes in delivering health
information on camera. Each video will be interactive, high definition, designed for small
screen size, such as for a smartphone or laptop computer. Each video prescription™ will
highlight the transition from hospital to home and focuses on what the diagnosis means, how
to treat it at home, and which signs should prompt the patient to return to the ED or seek
urgent care. A HIPAA-compliant tablet-based platform will link ED patients with their
personalized video education, establishing an innovative system of post-discharge
information sharing.
The use of video prescriptions™ will improve patient health education for the 100 million
patients who are discharged from U.S. ED's annually. This technology is particularly
applicable for hospitals that face increasing pressures to provide performance measures for
hospital discharge.
Video prescriptions™ will be utilized by ED patients, regardless of socioeconomic status,
will improve patient satisfaction and reduce unnecessary ED return visits.
- Specific Aim 1: Demonstrate patient utilization of video prescriptions Criteria for
acceptance: a hyperlink click rate of greater than 70%
- Specific Aim 2: Demonstrate improved health outcomes. Criteria for acceptance: a
reduction in return visits by 10%
- Specific Aim 3: Demonstrate quality of video content by showing improved patient
satisfaction scores. Criteria for acceptance: improvement in patient satisfaction
scores by 20%
patients are discharged, and the standard of care is to provide each patient/caregiver with
written instructions that highlight how to care for a particular illness at home and signs
to return to the hospital. Compliance with such ED discharge instructions is limited,
leading to suboptimal medical care and unnecessary return visits to the ED. Inadequate
health literacy, language disparities, and poor comprehension of written discharge
information contribute to this problem. This health gap is more prevalent in children of
young parents, low-income families, and minority populations where a disproportionate number
of patients visit the ED for non-emergent care, often because of a lack of health education.
The ED environment is chaotic and distracting and suboptimal to educate patients. Such
education is best accomplished where aftercare occurs—in the home, but many patients lack
direction and motivation to seek reliable sources of focused health education.
healthEworks LLC has developed Video Prescriptions™ - concise 3-5 minute video modules
specific to the most common discharge diagnoses that patients receive in the ED. Further
work is needed to develop a professional, diagnosis-specific product. These videos will
feature Dr. Christina Johns, an emergency physician who specializes in delivering health
information on camera. Each video will be interactive, high definition, designed for small
screen size, such as for a smartphone or laptop computer. Each video prescription™ will
highlight the transition from hospital to home and focuses on what the diagnosis means, how
to treat it at home, and which signs should prompt the patient to return to the ED or seek
urgent care. A HIPAA-compliant tablet-based platform will link ED patients with their
personalized video education, establishing an innovative system of post-discharge
information sharing.
The use of video prescriptions™ will improve patient health education for the 100 million
patients who are discharged from U.S. ED's annually. This technology is particularly
applicable for hospitals that face increasing pressures to provide performance measures for
hospital discharge.
Video prescriptions™ will be utilized by ED patients, regardless of socioeconomic status,
will improve patient satisfaction and reduce unnecessary ED return visits.
- Specific Aim 1: Demonstrate patient utilization of video prescriptions Criteria for
acceptance: a hyperlink click rate of greater than 70%
- Specific Aim 2: Demonstrate improved health outcomes. Criteria for acceptance: a
reduction in return visits by 10%
- Specific Aim 3: Demonstrate quality of video content by showing improved patient
satisfaction scores. Criteria for acceptance: improvement in patient satisfaction
scores by 20%
Inclusion Criteria:
- fits one of diagnostic criteria
- not previously enrolled in past week
Exclusion Criteria:
- primary language other than english or spanish
- does not consent to receive email communication
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