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Living With Multimorbidity: Care Coordination and Symptom Management Program (COORDINATE)
Sponsor: Johns Hopkins University
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a new care program, called the COORDINATE Program, can help older adults with two or more chronic health conditions. These individuals are being discharged from special hospital units called Intermediate Care Units (IMCUs), which care for people who are very sick but don't need intensive care. The main questions this study wants to answer are: 1. Can the COORDINATE Program improve participants' quality of life? 2. Can the program reduce emergency visits, intensive care admissions, and rehospitalizations? Researchers will compare the COORDINATE Program to the enhanced usual care with extra support to see if it works better. Participants will receive either the COORDINATE Program or enhanced usual care. They will also complete surveys at three different time points: before starting the intervention, at 3 months, and at 12 months. For those in the COORDINATE Program group, a trained nurse will guide them through: 1. A needs assessment to find out what matters most to them 2. A list of helpful questions to ask their care team 3. Goal-setting to support managing their conditions 4. Tracking their symptoms and progress 5. Attend a discharge visit and have 5 follow-up phone or video calls over 3 months Participants in both groups will be compensated for completing the surveys. The study hopes to improve how care is given to older adults with complex health needs and reduce unnecessary hospital visits.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
50 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
10
Start Date
2026-05
Completion Date
2028-03
Last Updated
2026-03-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
COORDINATE Program
The COORDINATE Program is a nurse-led, multicomponent intervention designed to support older adults with multiple chronic conditions during their transition from hospital to home. The intervention is delivered over a 3-month period and includes the following components: 1. Discharge Planning Visit: Conducted in person or via video, this session includes a needs assessment and shared decision-making conversation to identify participants' values and preferences. 2. Question Prompt List: A tailored list of questions is provided to help participants engage more effectively with their care team. 3. Goal Setting: Participants work with a nurse to identify short-term goals and action steps related to their health and care needs. 4. Symptom Monitoring: Participants track symptoms weekly using a symptom checklist to support ongoing management and communication with providers.
Enhanced Usual Care
Participants in this arm will receive enhanced usual care, which includes standard discharge instructions, scheduled check-ins, and a resource toolkit with educational materials. The content includes guidance on symptom management, advance care planning, and available community resources. Participants will receive follow-up reminders and wellness checks but will not receive the structured, nurse-led intervention provided in the COORDINATE Program.
Locations (1)
Johns Hopkins Health System
Baltimore, Maryland, United States