At a glance
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Evaluation of a "Fast Track" Respiratory Therapy Clinic for Patients With Suspected Severe Sleep-Disordered Breathing
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Fast Track for Sleep Disordered Breathing. Completed, enrolled 186 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Access to medical care for patients with breathing disorders during sleep is a major problem for Canadians. Recently, there has been increasing interest in how health care providers who are not physicians can help to improve access to medical care for these patients, but it is unclear whether patients with severe sleep-disordered breathing who receive care from these non-physician providers have the same response to treatment as patients who receive care from physicians. Since these severe have a high risk of developing cardiac and respiratory complications and of being hospitalized, an initiative to improve access such as the use of non-physician providers could be of great benefit to individual patients and the health care system. The objectives of this project are: 1. to determine whether patients with severe breathing disorders during sleep have the same response to treatment when cared for by non-physician health care providers (respiratory therapists) as they do when cared for by physicians; 2. to determine the effects of non-physician health care provider treatment to patient access; 3. to determine health care utilization and related costs associated with non-physician health care provider treatment.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
In the "Fast Track" arm, an ACP will perform the initial assessment and will determine the management plan with the patient. To ensure patient safety, the management plan will be discussed with a sleep respirologist, who will be designated as the patient's primary sleep physician. This sleep physician will be available at the FMC Sleep Centre during the "Fast Track" clinic to assist with the assessment of patients who appear unwell. As in the "Standard Management" arm, follow-up visits to review test results, discuss and initiate treatment, or to assess treatment response may occur with the ACP who performed the initial assessment or may be delegated to any other ACP.