Impact of a phone call with a medical student/general practitioner team on morbidity of chronic patients during the first French COVID-19 lockdown (COVIQuest): a cluster randomised trial
Bruno Giraudeau,
Estelle Boivin,
Vincent Camus,
Agnes Caille,
Olivier Saint-Lary,
Jean-Pierre Lebeau,
Stéphanie Sidorkiewicz,
Denis Pouchain,
Maeva Jego,
Sophie Sun,
Denis Angoulvant,
Wissam El-Hage,
Sébastien Bruel,
Clarisse Dibao-Dina,
Julie Léger,
Isabelle Ettori-Ajasse,
Juliette Chambe,
Karim Abou-Mrad-Fricquegnon,
Baptiste Motte,
Benoit Chiron,
Cam-Anh Khau,
Tiphanie Bouchez,
Maria Ghali,
Leslie Guillon-Grammatico,
Emeline Laurent,
Rémy Boussageon
Affiliations
Bruno Giraudeau
INSERM CIC 1415, Tours University Hospital, Tours, France
Estelle Boivin
CIC Tours, CHRU Tours, Tours, France
Vincent Camus
CHRU Tours, Tours, France
Agnes Caille
5Université François-Rabelais de Tours, PRES Centre-Val de Loire Université, Tours, France
Olivier Saint-Lary
Research, French National College of Teachers in General Practice, Paris, France
Jean-Pierre Lebeau
Research, French National College of Teachers in General Practice, Paris, France
Stéphanie Sidorkiewicz
Department of General Practice, Hôpital Hôtel-Dieu, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris Descartes University, Paris, France
Denis Pouchain
Department of General Practice, University of Tours, Tours, France
Maeva Jego
Department of General Practice, Aix-Marseille University, Marseille, France
Sophie Sun
CUMG, Universite Lyon 1 Faculte de Medecine Lyon-Est, Lyon, France
Denis Angoulvant
EA4245 T2i, Tours, France
Wissam El-Hage
CHRU Tours, Tours, France
Sébastien Bruel
Department of General Practice, Faculty Jacques Lisfranc, Jean Monnet University Medical, Saint Priest en Jarez, France
Clarisse Dibao-Dina
UMR INSERM 1246 - SPHERE, University of Tours, Tours, Centre-Val de Loire, France
Julie Léger
CIC Tours, CHRU Tours, Tours, France
Isabelle Ettori-Ajasse
EA 7505 EES, Tours, France
Juliette Chambe
Department of General Practice, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France
Karim Abou-Mrad-Fricquegnon
Department of General Practice, University of Tours, Tours, France
Baptiste Motte
Department of General Practice, University of Lille, Lille, France
Benoit Chiron
Department of General Practice, Bretagne Occidentale University, Brest, France
Cam-Anh Khau
Department of Medicine, University of Paris, Paris, France
Tiphanie Bouchez
Department of General Practice, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, Nice, France
Maria Ghali
Department of General Practice, University of Angers, Angers, France
Leslie Guillon-Grammatico
CHRU Tours, Tours, France
Emeline Laurent
CHRU Tours, Tours, France
Rémy Boussageon
UCBL, CNRS, UMR 5558, LBBE, EMET, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Villeurbanne, France
Objectives The first COVID-19 lockdown led to a significantly reduced access to healthcare, which may have increased decompensations in frail patients with chronic diseases, especially older patients living with a chronic cardiovascular disease (CVD) or a mental health disorder (MHD). The objective of COVIQuest was to evaluate whether a general practitioner (GP)-initiated phone call to patients with CVD and MHD during the COVID-19 lockdown could reduce the number of hospitalisation(s) over a 1-month period.Design This is a cluster randomised controlled trial. Clusters were GPs from eight French regions.Participants Patients ≥70 years old with chronic CVD (COVIQuest_CV subtrial) or ≥18 years old with MHD (COVIQuest_MH subtrial).Interventions A standardised GP-initiated phone call aiming to evaluate patients’ need for urgent healthcare, with a control group benefiting from usual care (ie, the contact with the GP was by the patient’s initiative).Main outcome measures Hospital admission within 1 month after the phone call.Results In the COVIQuest_CV subtrial, 131 GPs and 1834 patients were included in the intervention group and 136 GPs and 1510 patients were allocated to the control group. Overall, 65 (3.54%) patients were hospitalised in the intervention group vs 69 (4.57%) in the control group (OR 0.82, 95% CI 0.56 to 1.20; risk difference −0.77, 95% CI −2.28 to 0.74). In the COVIQuest_MH subtrial, 136 GPs and 832 patients were included in the intervention group and 131 GPs and 548 patients were allocated to the control group. Overall, 27 (3.25%) patients were hospitalised in the intervention group vs 12 (2.19%) in the control group (OR 1.52, 95% CI 0.82 to 2.81; risk difference 1.38, 95% CI 0.06 to 2.70).Conclusion A GP-initiated phone call may have been associated with more hospitalisations within 1 month for patients with MHD, but results lack robustness and significance depending on the statistical approach used.Trial registration number NCT04359875.