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Adapting, Implementing and Evaluating the Effectiveness of HARP for People With Disabilities
Sponsor: Washington University School of Medicine
Summary
The Home Hazard Removal Program (HARP) is an effective fall prevention intervention program which targets home hazard identification/removal. In this study the investigators will examine the effectiveness and implementation potential of HARP, adapted for PwD. Investigators will conduct a pilot randomized control trial (RCT) to test the implementation, cost, and preliminary efficacy of an adapted version of HARP for community-dwelling PwD. The single-blinded feasibility RCT will randomize 40 participants to treatment (adapted HARP) and 40 to a waitlist control group. Data on specific types of fall hazards and resulting home modifications as well as falls and fall-related injuries (collected monthly over 12 months) and fear of falling (collected at baseline and 12 months) will inform the preliminary efficacy of adapted HARP among PwD. To ensure usefulness, relevance, and broad dissemination of findings, the investigators will adopt a "designing for implementation and dissemination" approach. The RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance) framework will guide intervention adaptation, trial design, and future implementation. The Practical Robust Implementation and Sustainability Model (PRISM) guides study development by identifying multi-level contextual factors hypothesized to affect the RE-AIM outcomes.
Official title: Adapting, Implementing and Evaluating the Effectiveness of the Home Hazard Removal Program for People With Disabilities
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
45 Years - 64 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
80
Start Date
2025-08-20
Completion Date
2028-03-14
Last Updated
2025-11-14
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Adapted HARP
The adapted HARP intervention includes two to three in-home visits conducted by an OT practitioner over approximately 5 weeks in the homes of PwD. At the end of the first home visit, solutions to remove the identified fall hazards will be determined collaboratively with the participant, using motivational interviewing to establish hazards and shared-decision making and tailoring to help the participant brainstorm solutions to remove the hazards. Participants will then receive one to two additional visits from the OT, and a contractor if needed, to implement solutions using a self-management approach, identifying any additional hazards and subsequent modifications if necessary. All adaptive equipment and modifications will be provided at no cost to the participant. Booster visit(s) will be completed 3-6 months after the initial treatment sessions to ensure the home modifications are still appropriate, troubleshoot any equipment issues and review the self-management process.
Locations (1)
Washington University in St. Louis
St Louis, Missouri, United States