Patient Navigation in Primary Care and Access to Resources in the Community
NCT ID: NCT03451552
Last Updated: 2020-10-19
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
326 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-04-01
2019-05-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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During the feasibility phase the team established a regional stakeholder advisory group (Champlain LHIN). The composition of the advisory group has been adapted to meet the needs of the study. In the initial phase the composition was broad until the region identified the priority area and approach to addressing the gap. The committee is now composed of patients of various minority communities who contribute their lived experience, primary care providers from different care models and leaders from organizations responsible for community services (Community Care Access Centres and Community Health Centres) who inform the feasibility of the approach for each context, and best approach to integrating of the two sectors, health planners (the LHIN Primary Care Lead, senior integration specialist and others) who bring their broader context health services knowledge as well as resources (such as practice transformation facilitation services) to the project, as well as other stakeholders that inform specific components of the intervention (Ontario 211, Champlain Healthline). That Committee meets regularly and contributes directly to the direction of the study design, implementation, evaluation and dissemination. Because the committee fundamentally represents the interests of the region, it is often referred to in this document as 'the region".
The initial consultative phase identified poor access to CRs as a priority access gap. The research team relied on a scoping review conducted for the IMPACT program and conducted several interviews and focus groups with community stakeholders to inform the best approach addressing this gap. The region selected to implement a patient navigator who can assist patients for whom the use of a community service is recommended by their primary care provider achieve access to that service. Primary care providers rarely make specific recommendations to access CRs; largely because they are unaware of these. They make general recommendations to improve healthy behaviours, but do not refer to specific types of services. Two realist reviews have been commissioned and completed by a team of experts to help us understand the critical success factors and shape our intervention. One review is focused on "community navigators" and the other on "primary care referral to community services" to help the team understand the factors that support us. This information was used to develop the ARC intervention. A number of themes identified in these reviews including training for clinical staff to identify and refer to relevant CRs to address patients' social barriers; implementing a champion within practice to integrate referral into usual care; use of electronic health records to prompt provider referral and share information between provider and the community; and developing a screening process and promotional material to prompt referral.
As a result, the region developed the Access to Resources in the Community/Accès aux Resources Communautaires (ARC) intervention. The ARC project will build on this work by focussing on improving access to community resources in patients' language of choice and emphasizing access to French-language resources for Francophones in Ontario.
PURPOSE
The purpose of this project is to optimize appropriate access to community based services for socially complex primary care patients, including Franco-Ontarians living in minority situations, and promote the continuity of information across primary and community care.
OBJECTIVES AND DELIVERABLES
Objective A: Optimize equitable utilization of community based resources
Deliverable 1: Effectiveness of a patient navigator on utilization of CRs
Deliverable 2: Make policy recommendations to address remaining gaps
Deliverable 3: Establish a model of navigation that is transferable and scalable.
Objective B: Support continuity of information across Primary and Community Care
Deliverable 4: Establish a process that support appropriate exchange of information across the two sectors
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
The mixed method design is a sequential, explanatory design. Patients having consented to participate in the study will complete a survey, after which their random assignment to one of two arms (intervention or control) will be revealed.
The randomization schedule will be blocked at the practice level to ensure a balance of control and intervention patients for each practice, including all providers.
Patients randomized to the intervention arm will have access to services provided by the ARC Patient Navigator, whereas patients randomized to the control arm will be directed to the Ontario 211 navigation service.
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
NONE
Study Groups
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Control (211 services)
Patients allocated to the control arm will be directed to the Ontario 211 navigation service, which is already available to the general public free of charge. After consenting to participate in the study and completing the telephone survey, the research assistant will inform these patients that they can use existing navigation services provided by Ontario 211 to help them access the CR referred to them by their PHCP. The research assistant will instruct patients to dial 2-1-1 to obtain additional information on the nature of this service.
No interventions assigned to this group
Intervention (Patient Navigator)
Patients allocated to the intervention arm will be offered the services of the ARC Patient Navigator. After consenting to participate in the study and completing the telephone survey, the research assistant will inform these patients that they can use the services offered by the ARC patient navigator to help them access the CR referred to them by their PHCP. Following a brief description of the services provided by the navigator (e.g., arrange transportation, make appointments, fill out forms, etc.), patients will be offered to be contacted by the navigator by telephone or to meet with the navigator in person on a day and time that is most convenient for them.
Patient Navigator
Navigators will support patients to access community based resources for healthy living and self-management, rather than providing specific information about health issues. Navigators will teach patients how to identify available and relevant programs to meet their health-related goals, in their language of choice. The navigator will ensure that the individual understands the reason for referral and potential benefits. They will discuss social barriers potentially affecting patients' access to community health resources, and assist patients to prioritize their health goals and relevant resources to achieve these. The navigator will then assist patients to access the community-based services in the language of their choice to which they have been referred. The navigator may assist the patient in making appointments, coordinating transportation, and/or accompaniment to resources as required).
Interventions
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Patient Navigator
Navigators will support patients to access community based resources for healthy living and self-management, rather than providing specific information about health issues. Navigators will teach patients how to identify available and relevant programs to meet their health-related goals, in their language of choice. The navigator will ensure that the individual understands the reason for referral and potential benefits. They will discuss social barriers potentially affecting patients' access to community health resources, and assist patients to prioritize their health goals and relevant resources to achieve these. The navigator will then assist patients to access the community-based services in the language of their choice to which they have been referred. The navigator may assist the patient in making appointments, coordinating transportation, and/or accompaniment to resources as required).
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Located in a neighbourhood of the Champlain (Ottawa area) or North East (Sudbury area) LHIN that has a francophone population of 20% of greater, as listed identified in the Ottawa Neighbourhood Study and in custom neighbourhoods created by the city of Greater Sudbury for city planning purposes, both linked to Statistics Canada's 2011 Population Census, respectively.
* Having at least one primary care provider agreeing to participate in the study
* Work in a practice that meets the eligibility criteria participating practice will be invited to participate in the study.
* Is a Primary Health Care Provider: A health professional that may refer patients to CRs such as physicians, nurses, and social workers.
* Patient identifies a primary care provider participating in the study as their main primary care provider
* Has received a recommendation for a CR from their PHCP
* Is able to communicate in English or French, or is willing to be served via a cultural interpreter/translator, preferably a family member.
* Is able to provide consent for the study (18 years of age or older), or has parental/guardian proxy to provide consent (minor patients, patients with cognitive deficits)
Exclusion Criteria
* Practices that are under the traditional fee for service remuneration
* Located in a neighbourhood with less than 20% Francophone residents
Primary care providers:
* None
Primary care patients:
* Unable to provide consent and does not have a family member/guardian who can provide proxy consent
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Ottawa
OTHER
University of Ontario Institute of Technology
OTHER
Laurentian University
OTHER
Bruyère Health Research Institute.
OTHER
Ontario Ministry of Health and Long Term Care
OTHER_GOV
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
OTHER_GOV
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Simone Dahrouge, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Bruyère Health Research Institute.
Locations
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Bruyere Research Institute
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Countries
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References
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Saluja K, Mahbub A, Gauthier AP, Lemonde M, Timony P, Durand F, Dahrouge S. Understanding patient barriers and enablers to accessing community resources: a qualitative study to inform navigation service delivery. BMC Prim Care. 2025 Oct 24;26(1):322. doi: 10.1186/s12875-025-03029-z.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form: Practice and Provider Informed Consent Form (general)
Document Type: Informed Consent Form: Practice and Provider Informed Consent Form (interview)
Document Type: Informed Consent Form: Patient Informed Consent Form (general)
Document Type: Informed Consent Form: Patient Informed Consent Form (interview)
Other Identifiers
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20171215
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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