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Protocol for serious fall injury adjudication in the Strategies to Reduce Injuries and Develop Confidence in Elders (STRIDE) study

Authors :
Julie Weldon
Bridget M. Mignosa
Jocelyn Wiggins
Scott Margolis
Maureen Fagan
Molly Lukas
Heather G. Allore
Obafemi Okuwobi
David Buchner
Pamela W. Duncan
Abby C. King
Jocelyn Nunez
Lawrence Garber
Jeffrey Reist
Albert W. Wu
Sajida Saeed Chaudry
Neil B. Alexander
Cindy Stowe
Kevin P. High
Rosaly Correa-de-Araujo
Haseena Rajeevan
Fred C. Ko
Nancy K. Latham
Katy Araujo
Anita Leveke
Luann Bianco
Crysta Collins
Rixin Wang
Ariela R. Orkaby
Christian Espino
Carol Gordon
Linda V. Nyquist
Lori Goehring
Rosanne M. Leipzig
La Toya Edwards
Cathy Foskett
Deborah Matza
Roxana Hirst
Mukaila Raji
Robert B. Wallace
Scott Feeser
Mary Anne Sterling
Christine Moore
David B. Reuben
Mara Abella
Michael Albert
Geraldine Hawthorne-Jones
Steven B. Clauser
Susan L. Greenspan
Bimal Ashar
Brian Funaro
Patricia C. Dykes
Bernard Birnbaum
Evan C. Hadley
Siobhan K McMahon
Denise Esserman
Erich J. Greene
Amy Shelton
Jonathan F. Bean
Thomas R. Prohaska
Joanne M. McGloin
Marcel Salive
Bonita Lynn Beattie
Sabina Rubeck
Deborah West
Ravishankar Ramaswamy
Peggy Preusse
Thomas G. Travison
Mary Anne Ferchak
Azraa Amroze
Kenneth Rando
Martha B. Carnie
Susan S. Ellenberg
Vivian Chavez
Cynthia J. Brown
Alice Lee
Patti L. Ephraim
Charles Lu
Richard Eder
Amy Larson
Terry Fulmer
Rosario Garcia
Alejandra Salazar
Janelle Howe
Laurence Z. Rubenstein
Peter Peduzzi
Yan Chen
Samuel Ho
Erica Chopskie
Sui Tang
Thomas W. Storer
Teresita Pennestri
Charles Keller
Sergei Romashkan
Taylor Christiansen
Amrish Joseph
Eleni A. Skokos
Lea Harvin
Catherine Hanson
Tiffany Campbell
Liliya Katsovich
Joseph Bianco
Stephen C. Waring
Shalender Bhasin
Kimberly Larsen
James Goodwin
Thomas M. Gill
Angela Shanahan
Allison Richards
David A. Ganz
Anne McDonald
Karen Burek
Jerry H. Gurwitz
Leo Sherman
Dorothy I. Baker
Madeline Rigatti
Albert L. Siu
Nancy Gallagher
Hilary Stenvig
Margaret Hoberg
Joseph Madia
Jeremy N. Rich
Barbara Foster
Michael Miller
Nancy P. Lorenze
Rina Castro
Katy L. B. Araujo
Carri Casteel
Lyndon Joseph
Tara Scheck
Todd M. Manini
Laurence Friedman
Karen Wu
Laura Frain
Jay Magaziner
Yvette Wells
Allise Taran
Eloisa Martinez
Jeremy D. Walston
Tina Ledesma
James Dziura
Margaret Doyle
Naaz Hussain
Lea N. Harvin
Priscilla K. Gazarian
Brooke Brawley
Charles Boult
Yuri Agrawal
Peter Charpentier
Kety Florgomes
Shehzad Basaria
Elena Volpi
Cynthia L. Stowe
David Nock
Heather Larsen
Source :
Injury Epidemiology, Vol 6, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2019), Injury Epidemiology, Injury epidemiology, vol 6, iss 1
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Background This paper describes a protocol for determining the incidence of serious fall injuries for Strategies to Reduce Injuries and Develop Confidence in Elders (STRIDE), a large, multicenter pragmatic clinical trial with limited resources for event adjudication. We describe how administrative data (from participating health systems and Medicare claims) can be used to confirm participant-reported events, with more time- and resource-intensive full-text medical record data used only on an “as-needed” basis. Methods STRIDE is a pragmatic cluster-randomized controlled trial involving 5451 participants age ≥ 70 and at increased risk for falls, served by 86 primary care practices in 10 US health systems. The STRIDE intervention involves a nurse falls care manager who assesses a participant’s underlying risks for falls, suggests interventions using motivational interviewing, and then creates, implements and longitudinally follows up on an individualized care plan with the participant (and caregiver when appropriate), in partnership with the participant’s primary care provider. STRIDE’s primary outcome is serious fall injuries, defined as a fall resulting in: (1) medical attention billable according to Medicare guidelines with a) fracture (excluding isolated thoracic vertebral and/or lumbar vertebral fracture), b) joint dislocation, or c) cut requiring closure; OR (2) overnight hospitalization with a) head injury, b) sprain or strain, c) bruising or swelling, or d) other injury determined to be “serious” (i.e., burn, rhabdomyolysis, or internal injury). Two sources of data are required to confirm a serious fall injury. The primary data source is the participant’s self-report of a fall leading to medical attention, identified during telephone interview every 4 months, with the confirmatory source being (1) administrative data capturing encounters at the participating health systems or Medicare claims and/or (2) the full text of medical records requested only as needed. Discussion Adjudication is ongoing, with over 1000 potentially qualifying events adjudicated to date. Administrative data can be successfully used for adjudication, as part of a hybrid approach that retrieves full-text medical records only when needed. With the continued refinement and availability of administrative data sources, future studies may be able to use administrative data completely in lieu of medical record review to maximize the quality of adjudication with finite resources. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02475850). Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s40621-019-0190-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Details

ISSN :
21971714
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Injury Epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2cf1b7747d2caab1e894fd13b711c41b