Effects of Implementation of a Supervised Walking Program in Veterans Affairs Hospitals : A Stepped-Wedge, Cluster Randomized Trial
Abstract: Background: In trials, hospital walking programs have beenshown to improve functional ability after discharge, but littleevidence exists about their effectiveness under routine practiceconditions. Objective: To evaluate the effect of implementation of asupervised walking program known as STRIDE (AssiSTed EaRlyMobIlity for HospitalizeD VEterans) on discharge to a skilled-nursing facility (SNF), length of stay (LOS), and inpatient falls. Design: Stepped-wedge, cluster randomized trial. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03300336)Setting:8 Veterans Affairs hospitals from 20 August 2017 to19 August 2019. Patients: Analyses included hospitalizations involving patientsaged 60 years or older who were community dwelling andadmitted for 2 or more days to a participating medicine ward. Intervention: Hospitals were randomly assigned in 2 strati-fied blocks to a launch date for STRIDE. All hospitals receivedimplementation support according to the Replicating EffectivePrograms framework. Measurements: The prespecified primary outcomes weredischarge to a SNF and hospital LOS, and having 1 or moreinpatient falls was exploratory. Generalized linear mixed mod-els werefit to account for clustering of patients within hospitalsand included patient-level covariates. Results: Patients in pre-STRIDE time periods (n=6722) weresimilar to post-STRIDE time periods (n=6141). The propor-tion of patients with any documented walk during a poten-tially eligible hospitalization ranged from 0.6% to 22.7% perhospital. The estimated rates of discharge to a SNF were13% pre-STRIDE and 8% post-STRIDE. In adjusted models,odds of discharge to a SNF were lower among eligiblepatients hospitalized in post-STRIDE time periods (odds ratio[OR], 0.6 [95% CI, 0.5 to 0.8]) compared with pre-STRIDE.Findings were robust to sensitivity analyses. There were nodifferences in LOS (rate ratio,1.0 [CI, 0.9 to 1.1]) or havingan inpatient fall (OR,0.8 [CI, 0.5 to 1.1]). Limitation: Direct program reach was low. Conclusion: Although the reach was limited and variable,hospitalizations occurring during the STRIDE hospital walk-ing program implementation period had lower odds of dis-charge to a SNF, with no change in hospital LOS or inpatientfalls. Primary Funding Source: U.S. Department of VeteransAffairs Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (OptimizingFunction and Independence QUERI).
Abstract: IMPORTANCE: Veterans with occupational performance (e.g., activities of daily living [ADL]) limitations who are receiving inpatient psychiatric care may benefit from outpatient occupational therapy upon discharge, but access disparities have not been investigated. OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether ADL limitations, an indicator of need, are associated with outpatient occupational therapy utilization after inpatient psychiatric hospitalization in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) and whether this relationship differs by facility characteristics. DESIGN: Secondary analysis of VHA medical record data. Modified Poisson regression was used to model outpatient occupational therapy utilization (yes or no) as a function of ADL limitations, facility characteristics, and sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. Interactions were used to estimate whether the relationship between ADL limitations and outpatient occupational therapy utilization differs across facility characteristics. SETTING: VHA outpatient setting. PARTICIPANTS: Veterans who received VHA inpatient psychiatric care from 2015 to 2020 and lived