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Chronic Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Chronic Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT04892160 Completed - Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trials

Distracting Through Procedural Pain and Distress

Start date: February 15, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Children with acute and chronic illness undergo frequent, painful, and distressing procedures. This randomized control trial was used to evaluate the effectiveness of guided imagery (GI) vs virtual reality (VR) on the procedural pain and state anxiety of children and young adults undergoing un-sedated procedures. We explored the role of trait anxiety and pain catastrophizing in intervention response.

NCT ID: NCT04890223 Completed - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Efficacy of Brief MI Delivered Via Mobile Instant Messaging to Help Unmotivated Smokers With Chronic Diseases to Quit

Start date: June 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to examine the efficacy of brief MI delivered by mobile instant messaging tools in promoting smoking cessation among unmotivated smokers with chronic diseases. Participants in the intervention group will receive a brief MI intervention while the control group will receive a placebo intervention.

NCT ID: NCT04883684 Completed - Clinical trials for Emergencies, Chronic Disease

A Study to Evaluate Satisfaction of the Personal Health Record Platform for Chronic Patients in Emergency Department

Start date: September 6, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators developed the service showing patient health record altogether which is managed by each hospital separately and recording the patient health information based on mobile application. This study is a multi-centered study involving two hospitals, providing services to patients, care givers and medical staffs. After the participants use this service, the investigators evaluate the effectiveness and satisfaction of this service through questionnaires and in-depth interviews.

NCT ID: NCT04858802 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Rhinosinusitis (Diagnosis)

A Clinical Evaluation of PROPEL® Contour Sinus Implant

EXPAND
Start date: May 12, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of PROPEL Contour placement following an in-office frontal sinus balloon dilation (SBD) in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS)

NCT ID: NCT04854967 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive

Pilot Study: Post-Recovery LibEration From Oxygen in Exacerbated COPD

RELIEF Pilot
Start date: April 18, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators want to decrease inappropriate oxygen use for patients with COPD. The investigators are testing a new program that will stop oxygen prescriptions for patients that no longer need it and will instead provide them with training in skills that have been shown to help patients breathe better. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive the intervention program or usual care. After 12 weeks the investigators will determine if the program helped stop unnecessary oxygen prescription. The investigators will also determine if health status, distance walked during six minutes, and symptoms of breathlessness after walking are different between participants who received the program and those who did not. The investigators will meet with participating patients and their providers after the study is complete to find out how they feel about this program and if it would be possible to put this change into practice.

NCT ID: NCT04848623 Recruiting - Chronic Disease Clinical Trials

Identification of Vocal Biomarkers to Monitor the Health of People With a Chronic Disease

CoLive Voice
Start date: June 26, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The CoLive Voice research project aims to identify vocal biomarkers of severe conditions and frequent health symptoms. The project is based on digital technologies and statistical algorithms. This is an international anonymous survey where vocal recordings are collected simultaneously with large validated clinical and epidemiological data, in the context of various chronic diseases or frequent health symptoms in the general population.

NCT ID: NCT04836624 Completed - Clinical trials for Disability or Chronic Disease Leading to Disablement

Co-designing Personalised Assistive Technology

Start date: May 10, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Assistive technology is an important tool in helping people maintain independence, allowing them to actively participate in education, work, and society. If maximised to its full potential there would be significant health and wellbeing benefits for individuals, reduced reliance on formal health and social care services and reduced healthcare costs. However, current equipment is often unsuitable in meeting an individual's needs. Previous review work by the research team highlighted issues with the design, function, and service provision of assistive technology as barriers to its use. Two specific barriers, a lack of equipment customisation and a lack of end-user involvement in the provision process, are the focus of this work. This research aims to assess a new method that provides personalised assistive technology to individuals. The method will actively engage participants to input into the design of their own assistive device(s) to help them overcome their challenges of daily living. This method will help enable the device to be customized to their needs, a process known as co-design. Participants will be recruited from Swansea Bay University Health Board with a range of long-term physical health conditions whose current needs are unable to be met by current standard and off-the-shelf assistive technology solutions. Participants must be aged 18+ and currently living within the community. Participants will be involved in up to 6 interactive sessions spread over 3 months with the researcher. In the initial session the researcher will work with the participants to identify challenges in daily living for the device to overcome. In subsequent sessions, the researcher will design different solutions for the participant to try and feedback on, enabling the design to be adapted to the participants needs. Finally, the participants will evaluate the device provided through questionnaires and individual semi-structured interviews. This feedback will help assess the effectiveness of co-design and its feasibility to be incorporated into future NHS services.

NCT ID: NCT04815434 Completed - Chronic Disease Clinical Trials

Experience and Understanding of the Mouth, Oral Health and Function Amongst Adults With Disabilities and Complex Health Conditions.

FAULKS
Start date: April 7, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Oral health is the one of the commonest causes of health problems in the world, with almost all individuals suffering from reduced oral health at some stage over their life span. As such, oral health is a major public health issue and a major consumer of health spending. Poor oral health results in pain, infection, structural degradation, functional restrictions in chewing, swallowing and speech, change in facial appearance, social stigma, altered body image, and reduced capacity to participate in social events, amongst others. Global problems of human functioning, disability, health and environment in turn affect oral status in many complex ways (for example, ability to maintain oral hygiene, nutritional restrictions, neuromotor incapacity, dysphagia, ability to access and cooperate with treatment, etc). Disability arises from a social environment that fails to enable everyone to access it regardless of his or her impairment. Disabilities are thus socially created and not dependent on the individual's type or location of impairment. There is currently very limited qualitative research exploring perceptions of the mouth, or oral health within a social environment, from the perspective of disabled adults. No universal, holistic, comprehensive tool exists to describe oral health, the functional impact of oral health, and the environmental factors influencing oral health within the biopsychosocial model. It has been suggested that a framework for such an instrument may be supplied by the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF: World Health Organisation, 2001) This research seeks to address these gaps by describing perceptions of the mouth from the perspective of adults with disabilities and complex health conditions, and by linking this qualitative data to the ICF in order to assess the feasibility of using the ICF to conceptualise oral health. Adults with disabilities and complex health conditions were chosen for this ICF core set preliminary study as existing literature suggests that these respondents would accumulate not only a high level of oral health need but also experience high impact of functioning and environment on oral health.

NCT ID: NCT04815278 Recruiting - Diabetes Clinical Trials

NC Works4Health: Reducing Chronic Disease Risks in Socioeconomically Disadvantaged, Unemployed Populations

NCW4H
Start date: September 17, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The proposed study, NC Works4Health (NCW4H), builds on the strengths of long-standing academic-community research partnerships between this UNC at Chapel Hill (UNC) team of investigators and key stakeholders across health, social service, employment, and economic development sectors. The overall goal of this study is to test the effectiveness of a multilevel intervention that can be readily adopted by communities to reduce chronic disease risks in socioeconomically disadvantaged populations by (a) embedding prevention efforts in DSS-E programs at the individual level, and (b) enhancing supervisor supports for DSS-E hires at the employer level. Interventions at each level, and their joint effects, are designed to mitigate the psychological, behavioral, and clinically relevant risks for chronic disease onset, morbidity, and comorbidity that accrue with unemployment and the employment-entry transition.

NCT ID: NCT04806620 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome

Solve Together: A Data Collection Platform for the Collection of Patient and Control Health Information to Support Future Research That Will Accelerate Understanding of the Causes of and Possible Treatments for ME/CFS and Other Chronic Diseases, Including Post-viral Illnesses

Start date: July 5, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Solve Together is a platform designed to collect clinical data about post-infectious diseases, including ME/CFS and Long Covid. This data is made available to researchers and will be used to identify participants eligible for clinical studies. The platform also empowers patients to make reports for their doctors, connect medical records and/or a health-tracking wearable device, and identify their unique symptoms and health patterns.