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NCT07589673
This study aims to develop and evaluate an online shared decision-making (SDM) educational program for nurses and patients with chronic diseases. Shared decision-making is a process in which healthcare professionals and patients make health-related decisions together based on the best available evidence and the patient's values and preferences. The study includes an evaluation phase. In the evaluation phase, the program will be tested among nurses working in general hospitals and adults with chronic diseases living in the community. Outcomes related to shared decision-making will be assessed at baseline, immediately after the 4-week program, and 1 month later. The study is expected to improve shared decision-making competence, experience, and preparedness among both nurses and patients.
NCT07098065
Tobacco use remains persistently high across South Asia, despite numerous public health efforts, and continues to significantly contribute to the burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular disease, hypertension, diabetes, and stroke. Community pharmacists-widely accessible and trusted within their communities-are an underutilized resource for delivering public health interventions. Graphic health warnings (GHWs), recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), have been shown to promote smoking cessation, but are rarely paired with personalized counseling by healthcare providers. This study aims to evaluate both the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of integrating GHWs with pharmacist-led personalized counseling at primary healthcare pharmacies in Bangladesh and Pakistan. A cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be conducted, enrolling 3,240 adult participants in Bangladesh and \~160 participants in Pakistan (for feasibility study) from community pharmacies. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: (1) GHW only (distribution of printed booklets); (2) GHW + counseling (pharmacist-led counselling sessions based on booklets at baseline and six months, with monthly SMS reminders); or (3) standard care (usual pharmacy services with no additional materials). The intervention includes twice-yearly counseling sessions-delivered both in-person and digitally-supported by educational booklets and leaflets. The primary outcome is self-reported 7-day point prevalence abstinence at 12 months (validated where feasible). Secondary outcomes include reduction in cigarettes per day, quit attempts, readiness to quit, awareness of tobacco harms, diet and physical activity scores, quality of life, blood pressure control among hypertensive participants, and cost-effectiveness. Feasibility outcomes in Pakistan include recruitment rate, participant retention, intervention fidelity and acceptability. Bayesian statistical models will be used to assess efficacy, and economic evaluations will determine the cost-effectiveness of the interventions. The findings aim to inform scalable public health strategies for tobacco control and NCD prevention in resource-limited settings.
NCT07514312
This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of an artificial intelligence (AI)-supported, context-aware digital nudging intervention designed to reduce ultra-processed food consumption and improve dietary sustainability among adolescents and young adults. The intervention utilizes real-time behavioral data, including image-assisted dietary logging and contextual information, to identify high-risk consumption moments and deliver personalized, non-coercive nudges. The study will assess changes in ultra-processed food intake, contextual consumption patterns, and sustainability-related dietary indicators.
NCT06743685
This is a mixed methods pilot feasibility trial of HEALthy Beginnings, an innovative, nurse-driven intervention. Middle-aged and older, homeless women (MAO-HW) will participate in the HEALthy Beginnings intervention and select MAO-HW will be invited to participate in post-intervention qualitative focus groups to evaluate the program.
NCT07479810
This quasi-experimental study aims to assess if a nurse-led proactive intervention can enhance self-care and reduce hospitalizations or accesses to emergency department visits in chronically ill adults over 65 years old. The questions that it seeks to answer are the following: 1. Can a structured, proactive nurse-led intervention reduce hospitalizations and access to emergency departments? 2. Can this intervention improve self-care, medication adherence, and the overall quality of life? To assess its effectiveness, researchers will evaluate health outcomes before and after carrying out the intervention. Participants will receive an initial assessment to identify specific educational needs. To enhance self-care and symptom management, patients will participate in at least three scheduled follow-up sessions (via phone call or face-to-face) during the following six months. They will also complete questionnaires assessing lifestyle quality, medication adherence, and self-care abilities.
NCT07075536
Among people who do not want to get pregnant, some do not use any birth control. This is also called contraceptive nonuse. Common reasons for contraceptive nonuse include concerns about birth control safety or side effects. People with health conditions, such as diabetes or high blood pressure, also report worries about how different birth control methods might affect their health condition or medicines. The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a web tool called My Health, My Choice helps people with health conditions understand their birth control options and choose birth control that is right for them. The study will also look at the medical safety of birth control methods that participants decide to use. The main questions it aims to answer are: • Does the My Health My Choice tool lower the number of participants who do not use any birth control method? (contraceptive nonuse) In other words, does the My Health My Choice tool increase the number of participants who use any birth control method? (contraceptive use) Participants who use the My Health, My Choice tool before a clinic visit with their clinician (Intervention Group) will be compared to participants who only go to a clinic visit with their clinician (Usual Care Group). For this study, a "clinician" is any licensed health care provider who counsels about birth control, prescribes birth control, and/or inserts birth control devices. All participants will: * Complete 4-5 online surveys that take 5-10 minutes each, over a 3 month time period * Be asked to go to a scheduled clinic visit with their health care provider * A small group of participants (about 30) will be invited to a 1 hour exit interview Participants in the intervention arm will be asked to: • Use the My Health My Choice tool before their clinic visit
NCT07340580
A public health priority exists for the U.S. healthcare sector to integrate physical activity (PA) as a part of the patient care model. This research will provide valuable information on facilitating optimal implementation of a clinic-to-community model that identifies, refers, and enrolls physically inactive patients to community-based PA programs for the prevention and treatment of chronic diseases. Further, this work will provide evidence on the cost-effectiveness of integrating PA in healthcare systems as a population health management strategy.
NCT07422922
Unhealthy diets significantly contribute to major preventable chronic diseases including type 2 diabetes, obesity, heart disease and stroke, which disproportionally impact racial/ethnic minority groups and those with lower income \[1-3\]. Although taxes and warning labels targeting sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB) have been successful at shifting behavior \[4-7\], there are many other ultra-processed food products that contribute to unhealthy diets \[8\]. What is less well-known is whether a suite of healthy food policies that are expanded to target a range of ultra-processed foods can shift dietary choices and intake in meaningful ways. Our research team's long-term goal is to identify and understand the degree to which combinations of healthy food policies can improve nutrition security and reduce nutrition-related diseases.
NCT04761016
The primary aim of this study is to determine whether community health worker (CHW) navigation improves outcomes of chronic disease and chronic disease risk factors in a low-income, primarily ethnic minority population when combined with an evidence-based population health model as compared to usual care after 10 months.
NCT04087798
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a serious and growing public health problem. The purpose of this study is to find out if an educational worksheet, called the Encounter Decision Intervention (EDI), combined with health coaching helps CKD patients improve their blood pressure and other health outcomes. The research team hypothesizes that the intervention group will have greater improvement in CKD outcomes than the control group.
NCT05970367
This project will consist of 1 large clinical trial with 3 core concepts: (1) Clinical benefits of an intensive rehabilitation programme using advanced technology, compared to the control group; (2) A full health economic evaluation combined with model-based estimation of costs and benefits; (3) process evaluation.
NCT07330635
Lower limb circulatory insufficiency and the associated chronic wounds are common health problems among the elderly. These issues not only affect the individual's mobility and quality of life but also potentially increase medical costs and caregiving expenses. Traditional treatment methods often employ medications to enhance blood circulation, but these clinical approaches have limited effectiveness and induce the risk of side effects. Utilizing exercise as an intervention strategy can help improve lower limb blood circulation in the elderly while reducing the side effects associated with medications. However, due to physical frailty, elderly individuals often cannot participate in high-intensity exercises to improve their circulatory performance. Therefore, this study will develop a lower limb circulation enhancement exercise system to improve the circulatory performance in individuals with poor lower limb circulation. It will compare the effects of lower limb circulation enhancement exercise, vibration exercise, and mixed exercise on improving blood circulation and functional performance in the elderly or individuals with poor lower limb circulation. Participants will be randomly assigned into three groups: the lower limb circulation enhancement exercise group, the vibration exercise group, and the mixed exercise group. In addition, a separate group of young adults (control group) will serve as a reference for baseline comparisons. Initially, all participants will undergo a one-time exercise test, followed by a 12-week intervention. The lower limb circulation enhancement exercise group will perform a 30-minute leg press rowing exercise three times a week, while the vibration exercise group will engage in vibration exercise at the same frequency, and the mixed exercise group will perform group-based mixed exercise training at the same frequency. The young adult control group will not receive any intervention but will undergo the same assessments. Outcome evaluations before and after the intervention include lower limb blood perfusion monitoring, pain scales, and functional performance assessments.
NCT07162350
The Food as Medicine (FAME) intervention aims to improve dietary quality in lower income, primarily ethnic minority youth through food navigation that bridges clinical care and community food resources. This study will evaluate the FAME intervention on dietary quality, food behaviors, health outcomes, and cost-effectiveness, using a pragmatic randomized clinical trial design in 250 at risk youth (8-15 years of age) and their caregiver(s) as compared to Usual Care through the following aims: Aim 1: To evaluate the impact of the FAME intervention on child and caregiver(s) dietary quality at 6 and 12 months as compared to Usual Care. Hypothesis: FAME participants will have increased dietary quality as measured by ASA-24/DQI. Aim 2: To assess the intervention's impact on food behaviors, food insecurity, healthy food sourcing, knowledge, self-efficacy, health outcomes and cost-effectiveness at 6 and 12 months as compared to Usual Care. Aim 3: Evaluate implementation outcomes including dose, satisfaction, and individual interviews and focus groups with youth, parents, physicians, clinic staff, community partners, and CHWs.
NCT04306939
This is a prospective, descriptive, observational research study designed to observe and document the clinical practice by domain experts, and how the knowledge of new findings that are published in the medical literature affect clinical decision making. The study will evaluate risk factors and co-variants, including genetic variants that are associated with disease progression such as pain, inflammation, organ dysfunction, disability and quality of life.
NCT07316829
With this project, the research team aims to identify the molecular pathways associated with the response to extracorporeal photonchemioapheresis (ECP) in kidney or lung transplant patients suffering from chronic rejection, by analyzing gene expression in samples of peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
NCT06073041
Multiple case study trial examining the adoption, implementation, and reach of eligible patients visiting participating Prisma Health primary care clinics and receiving a referral to a 12-week evidence-informed physical activity (PA) program hosted at local community PA facilities.
NCT07241780
This double-blind randomized controlled trial was conducted to comparatively evaluate the effectiveness of live parrot, robotic parrot, and parrot picture therapies on pain during venipuncture in adults with chronic illness.
NCT05981508
The purpose of this research study is to test the feasibility and acceptability of an interactive counselor -led online family skills training as part of a behavioral weight loss program for Black Adults.
NCT06443190
The objective of this pathway is to establish and evaluate a novel Indigenous-led patient navigator (IPN) program for Indigenous adolescents living with chronic health conditions in Maskwacis, Alberta. Over the last three years a community-based participatory research partnership was developed with Elders and community members from Maskwacis, Maskwacis Health Services, and researchers from the University of Alberta. Previous research identified the need for an IPN to support Indigenous young adults and their caregivers in managing their health conditions transitioning into adulthood and transferring from pediatric to adult healthcare. The aim of partnership now is to evaluate whether a community-derived IPN program co-designed with an established group of Maskwacis Elders, Knowledge Keepers, healthcare providers, caregivers and youth with lived experience can aid in improving the experience of transitioning into adult healthcare services for Indigenous youth and their families living in Maskwacis, Alberta.
NCT04966117
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the number one killer of Australians with a high risk for a recurrent event(s) and hospital readmission. Many of these readmissions can be prevented with better management to control the problem of CAD. A disease management program, led by nurses who interact with other health professionals/providers, can help with education and counselling, taking medications correctly and making healthy lifestyle changes for higher risk patients. Newer models of disease management programs make use of mobile devices (such as an "app") and telehealth (by phone or video call) to monitor and manage health which could facilitate CAD management. Therefore, the aim of this study is to test this type of disease management program (DMP) compared to standard care for reducing hospital readmissions or death in people with CAD who are at high risk of being readmitted. The Investigators envisage that a novel Risk-Guided DMP will be favorable to patients and associated with high-level participation. The Investigators hypothesize that high-risk patients randomized to Risk-Guided CAD will have reduced hospital readmissions or death compared with those randomized to usual care.