Clinical Decision-Making Clinical Trial
Official title:
Development of an Individualized, Web-Based Life Support Decision Aid (eLSDA) Concerning Goals of Care for the Seriously Ill Patient
Patients and families want to be involved in healthcare decisions. When the decision-making process does not engage older patients and their families, the care provided does not match patient preferences or meet their needs. Healthcare teams can collaborate to support patients and families facing difficult healthcare decisions, such as decisions about the use of technology used to keep a person alive when they are critically ill. Tools called patient decision aids are used in many health care settings to help patients and families understand their options and figure out the benefits and harms of a treatment to decide what is right for them. The healthcare team can make sure that patients understand the information provided, give them opportunities to ask questions, and help them talk more about the decision with others. This research study is trialing a web based patient decision aid class of intervention. It is anticipated that 120 hospitalized, seriously ill, older adult patients/ families and their healthcare professionals will be recruited. The study will determine if the intervention can improve dialogue about whether life sustaining technology for seriously ill older patients. The findings will contribute to what is already known about overcoming challenges to involving patients and families with a goal of keeping patients and families at the centre of decisions about their health.
A concurrent mixed method study of a life support decision aid (eLSDA) intends to prepare
hospitalized, seriously ill older adult patients and their families to participate in shared
decision-making. The study includes 1) randomized controlled trial and 2) a qualitative
(naturalistic observation) study. The experimental study compares a convenience cohort of
participants who receive usual care (n=60 patients or patient/surrogate pairs) to a cohort of
participants who receive the intervention (n=60 patients or patient/surrogate pairs). The
investigators intend to measure a) knowledge of life-sustaining technologies, b) clarity of
values, c) congruence between documented physician's orders and patient choice, d) decisional
conflict, and e) quality of communication. For the intervention group only, investigators
will measure comprehensibility and acceptability of the eLSDA. The observational qualitative
study derived from naturalistic observation will involve participant observation to examine
dialogue about life support between hospitalized, seriously ill older adult patients,
families and their healthcare professionals. Quantitative and qualitative data will be
collected to better understand the comprehensibility, acceptability, usability, feasibility
and impact of the eLSDA used in routine clinical practice.
Questionnaires, patient/family/physician discussions and web based tool viewing will be
completed in a hospital setting. The investigator will administer pre-intervention
questionnaires to the participants, which will take approximately 15 minutes. Participants
will then be randomized to groups, and be invited to use the web based eLSDA or usual care
materials on a laptop computer or tablet (30 minutes). This will be followed by
post-intervention questionnaires in a second interview (15 minutes). Physicians and
nurses/social workers will be asked to complete a survey to examine the barriers to
discussions about goals of care (15 minutes). The investigator will also fill out the chart
abstraction tool after the participants give consent.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05054049 -
Point of Care Testing for Advanced Practitioners (Paramedics)
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03875846 -
Intraoperative Simultaneous Pressure Guided Revascularization Study
|
||
Completed |
NCT04602676 -
The Acceptability and Impact of Diarrheal Etiology Prediction (DEP) Algorithm
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05182008 -
A Patient Decision Aid for Method of Early Abortion: A Randomized Control Trial
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04139642 -
Standing Balance as the Fifth Vital Sign in Clinical Setting
|
||
Withdrawn |
NCT03283592 -
Review and Assessment of Network Meta-analyses for Knowledge Uptake Study
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04218188 -
Evaluation of the Cell Detachment Ratio on pH-responsive Chitosan as a Prognostic Factor in Lung Cancer
|
||
Completed |
NCT00298727 -
The Effect and Mediators of Two Knowledge Translation Strategies
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT06208423 -
Physician Reasoning on Management Cases With Large Language Models
|
N/A | |
Unknown status |
NCT01255488 -
Research Abstract Usefulness in Clinical Decision-making
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06235060 -
The Effect of Two Dıfferent Technıques Used in Psychomotor Skılls Traınıng on Nursıng Students
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05657002 -
A Study to the Impact of Accuracy Problem Lists in Electronic Health Records on Correctness and Speed of Clinical Decision-making Performed by Dutch Healthcare Providers
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03449862 -
Key Information Can Influence Clinician Ordering of Brain CTs
|
N/A |