Volume 55 | Number S2 | October 2020

Abstract List

Aditi Vasan MD, John W. Morgan MD, Nandita Mitra, Chang Xu MS, Judith A. Long MD, David A. Asch, Shreya Kangovi MD, MS


Objective

To analyze the effects of a standardized community health worker (CHW) intervention on hospitalization.


Data Sources/Study Setting

Pooled data from three randomized clinical trials (n = 1340) conducted between 2011 and 2016.


Study Design

The trials in this pooled analysis were conducted across diseases and settings, with a common study design, intervention, and outcome measures. Participants were patients living in high‐poverty regions of Philadelphia and were predominantly Medicaid insured. They were randomly assigned to receive usual care versus IMPaCT, an intervention in which CHWs provide tailored social support, health behavior coaching, connection with resources, and health system navigation. Trial one (n = 446) tested two weeks of IMPaCT among hospitalized general medical patients. Trial two (n = 302) tested six months of IMPaCT among outpatients at two academic primary care clinics. Trial three (n = 592) tested six months of IMPaCT among outpatients at academic, Veterans Affairs (VA), and Federally Qualified Health Center primary care practices.


Data Collection/Extraction Methods

The primary outcome for this study was all‐cause hospitalization, as measured by total number of hospital days per patient. Hospitalization data were collected from statewide or VA databases at 30 days postenrollment in Trial 1, twelve months postenrollment in Trial 2, and nine months postenrollment in Trial 3.


Principal Findings

Over 9398 observed patient months, the total number of hospital days per patient in the intervention group was 66 percent of the total in the control group (849 days for 674 intervention patients vs 1258 days for 660 control patients, incidence rate ratio (IRR) 0.66,  < .0001). This reduction was driven by fewer hospitalizations per patient (0.27 vs 0.34,  < .0001) and shorter mean length of stay (4.72 vs 5.57 days,  = .03). The intervention also decreased rates of hospitalization outside patients' primary health system (18.8 percent vs 34.8 percent,  = .0023).


Conclusions

Data from three randomized clinical trials across multiple settings show that a standardized CHW intervention reduced total hospital days and hospitalizations outside the primary health system. This is the largest analysis of randomized trials to demonstrate reductions in hospitalization with a health system‐based social intervention.