Application and Effect of "Internet + Nursing" in Hip Fragility Fracture Patients Based on Fracture Liaison Service
NCT06975254 · Status: RECRUITING · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 94
Last updated 2025-05-16
Summary
Fragility fractures, also known as osteoporotic fractures, are fractures that occur as a result of low-energy trauma or minor impact. They are the most serious complication of osteoporosis and are common bone diseases in the elderly. With our country gradually entering the aging society, the incidence of brittle fracture is increasing year by year, most often in the hip. Hip fracture refers to femoral neck, intertrochanteric and subtrochanteric fractures. Due to a series of complications caused by old age, weak body, many underlying diseases, significant decline in self-care ability and other reasons, it is also known as the last fracture in life. According to reports, within 1 year after hip fracture, only 30% of patients can recover to the functional state before fracture, 20% of patients will fracture again, and even cause lifelong disability, seriously affecting the long-term quality of life of patients, the reason may be related to the long course of disease, slow recovery, postoperative nutrition, rehabilitation exercise compliance, self-care ability decline and many other aspects. The fracture liaison service (FLS) is a nurse-centric, multidisciplinary approach to managing osteoporotic fractures that consists of three key elements: The core of identifying patients with fracture risk, assessing fall risk and initiating treatment to prevent refracture is to hire specialized coordinators to link emergency, orthopedics, rehabilitation, nutrition and other departments with community and family services to provide standardized management services for patients, reduce the incidence of refracture and promote the recovery of joint function of patients. Therefore, this study integrates FLS with "Internet + nursing service" and utilizes the advantages of "Internet + nursing service" in informatization to emphasize the risk assessment of re-fracture of patients at home after discharge, home health guidance (such as fall prevention, rehabilitation training and other related knowledge), online consultation of multidisciplinary teams, offline on-site service, etc., so that patients can be discharged from hospital. Access to ongoing medical care reduces the incidence of complications and promotes rapid recovery.
Conditions
- Fragility Fractures
Interventions
- OTHER
-
On the basis of routine nursing, the "Internet + nursing program" based on the FLS model is implemented
1\) During hospitalization: After the patient is admitted to hospital, the coordinator will establish wechat contact with the patient face to face and establish a good trust relationship with the patient; The coordinator and the doctor will collect the patients' cases together, and then according to the patients' conditions and wishes, the diagnosis and treatment plan will be formulated jointly by multiple disciplines, including medicine, rehabilitation and nutrition management. 2) Before discharge: the coordinator helps the patient to make an appointment for return visit; Issue business cards of the team's online and offline services to patients and guide them to use wechat and online service application procedures (such as Zheli Care and Dr. Nari); 3) After discharge: patients keep in touch with the liaison staff at any time, and any abnormal situation will be contacted by the liaison staff; Team members supervised the patient's medication situation by punching in the mini program
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
The Fourth Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Cheng li Yan, Bachelor · The Fourth Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang UniversitySchool of Medicine
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- SUPPORTIVE_CARE
- Masking
- SINGLE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2025-04-01
- Primary Completion
- 2026-12-31
- Completion
- 2027-12-31
Countries
- China
Study Locations
More Related Trials
-
Contribution of Stereography (EOS Imaging System) in the Quantification of Femoral Shaft Fractures.
NCT03251534 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Relationship Between Mortality Rates of Fractures in Different Sites and Several Factors in Elderly Patients
NCT07147504 ·Status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING
-
Short Segment Fixation in Thoracolumbar Osteoporotic Fracture
NCT02719340 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
The Effects of Fragility Fracture Integrated Rehabilitation Management
NCT04760756 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Effectiveness or Orthopedic Intervention in Osteoporosis Management After a Fracture of the Hip With Cost-Benefit Analysis
NCT02239523 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Risk Factors for Intertrochanteric Femoral Fractures With Concomitant Lateral Wall Involvement in Elderly Women
NCT07196982 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Evaluation of the Proximal Femoral Nail Antirotation With Cement Augmentation in Osteoporotic Femoral Neck Fractures
NCT01235169 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: PHASE1/PHASE2
-
Safety of Immediate Weight-Bearing as Tolerated After Well-Reduced Geriatric Hip
NCT06199739 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Influence of Osteoporosis on Clinical Outcomes of Mini-invasive Surgical Treatment of Proximal Humerus Fractures
NCT02750839 ·Status: UNKNOWN
-
The Effect of Training Prepared in Line With Fracture Liaison Service Model on Frailty in Hip Surgery Patients
NCT05900804 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Randomized Fracture Liaison Services
NCT03178799 ·Status: ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
-
Conservative Versus Surgical Treatment of Impacted Femoral Neck Fracture in Patient 75 Years Old and Older
NCT04219943 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Hand-held Optical Coherence Tomography Feasibility Older Hip Fracture
NCT04041336 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
To Investigate the Effect of Early Community-care Program on Fracture Hip Patient
NCT01537523 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Comparative Study on Surgical Approaches for Elderly Femoral Neck Fractures
NCT06760949 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Post-acute Care for Patients With Hip Fracture
NCT04287101 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Outcome After Plate Osteosynthesis of Proximal Humerus Fractures Using Continous Passive Motioning Therapy
NCT05952622 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Proximal Femoral Fractures - Patient Population, Risk Factors, Surgical Performance and Outcome
NCT03768622 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Risk Factors and Complications Contributing to Mortality in Elderly Patients With Fall-Induced Femoral Fracture
NCT03822000 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Influence of Local Bone Status on Complications After Surgical Treatment of Proximal Humerus Fractures
NCT01143675 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Impact of Mobile Health Technology Application on Proximal Humerus Fracture Care Practice
NCT04572022 ·Status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING ·Phase: NA
-
Effect of a Multicomponent Intervention on Functional Capacity After Hip Fracture
NCT05435534 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Rehabilitation Care for Hip Fracture
NCT01934946 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Influence of the Spatial Distribution of Hollow Screws on the Blood Supply and Prognosis of Femoral Neck Fractures
NCT05171140 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Periprosthetic Bone Remodeling in Femoral Neck Fracture Patients; a 5-year Follow up Study
NCT03753100 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA