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NCT ID: NCT06420609 Not yet recruiting - Advanced Cancer Clinical Trials

Efficacy of a Proactive Approach to Death Thoughts in People With Advanced Cancer: a Randomized Clinical Trial

Go-TAD
Start date: May 14, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy of a proactive intervention to approach death thoughts among people with advanced cancer compared to usual care (the reactive approach) via a feasible approach with previous indicators of efficacy: Go-TAD (Give the Oportunity to Talk about Death). The benefits of the intervention will be evaluated in terms of: reduction of emotional distress and hopelessness and improvement the doctor-patient relationship, as well as improvement of quality of life for the patient. A Phase II randomized controlled mixed methods clinical trial (RCT) will be carried out within 4 Palliative Care units of tertiary care hospitals in Catalonia. Participants will be persons with advanced cancer defined according to the criteria of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. Participants will be randomly assigned to an intervention group or control group. In the intervention group, the participants will receive a medical visit that will include the 4 open-ended questions comprising the Go-TAD intervention, while the control group will receive usual care. Between 24 and 96 hours later, a researcher from outside the center will assess study outcome measures. To strengthen the study conclusions, a qualitative study will be carried out in which the experiences of the participants in the intervention group and of their professionals who administered the Go-TAD will be explored in depth.

NCT ID: NCT06415942 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Pregnancy Related Death

A Single Arm Clinical Trial Assessing the Maternal Outcome Monitoring Systems"

MOMS
Start date: July 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Pregnancy-related death is a growing public health issues, which are of particular concern to minority groups, including African-Americans and Spanish-speaking Latinas. Our proposal aims to improve a patient's ability to detect warning signs of pregnancy related death and seek medical care.

NCT ID: NCT06400498 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for End-Stage Liver Disease

Surprise Question in End of Life (SeQuEL) Care and the Effect of Prompting Palliative Care Consultation: End-Stage Liver Disease

SeQuEL
Start date: December 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a single center randomized platform trial determining whether prompting consideration of palliative care consultation through the electronic health record impacts the number of palliative consultations placed and hospital-free days among hospitalized adults with End-Stage Liver Disease.

NCT ID: NCT06371677 Not yet recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

Polish Nationwide Register of Hospitalized Patients in Cardiac Intensive Care Units

POL-CICU
Start date: October 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Cardiac Intensive Care Units (CICUs) provide care for a diverse patient population. Understanding the clinical characteristics, analysis of treatment modalities, and prognosis of patients hospitalized in the CICU are important to improve cardiovascular care. The purpose of this registry is to determine the demographics, clinical, treatment, and prognosis of patients hospitalized in the Polish CICUs. Data from this multicenter, prospective observational study will provide more robust data to facilitate quantitative characterization of cardiac care in contemporary Polish CICUs and enable the development of infrastructure for clinical trials in CICUs.

NCT ID: NCT06359119 Not yet recruiting - Brain Death Clinical Trials

Implementation of Apnoea Test for Patients With Suspected Brain Death

Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study consists of a survey created for intensive care physicians regarding their current practice of the implementation of apnoea test for patients with suspected brain death.

NCT ID: NCT06314035 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Decision Support on End-of-life Care Planning in Older Adults

Start date: March 10, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to test the effects of a patient decision aid (PDA) on planning for end-of-life (EOL) care among older adults with COPD. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Does a PDA improve the process of a person to make decisions on EOL care? 2. Does a PDA improve the readiness of a person to join advance care planning (ACP) communication? 3. Does a person make an advance directive after using a PDA? Participants in this study will: 1. Be randomly assigned to one of two groups. 2. In the experimental group, participants will receive two 60-minute interactive consultations over four weeks, using a PDA to help clarify values and preferences for future medical care. A guidebook summarising these future care options will be provided. 3. In the control group, participants will receive two 60-minute sessions on lifestyle modification and self-care management over four weeks using a guidebook with coaching. A guidebook summarising general health information will be provided. Researchers will compare the intervention group to the control group to see if the PDA is better at improving the decision-making process on EOL care, the readiness of a person to join ACP communication and the chance to make an advance directive.

NCT ID: NCT06310434 Not yet recruiting - Adolescent Behavior Clinical Trials

Analysis of COMPASsion and Humanisation of Adolescents Facing the End-of-life Processes.

COMPAS
Start date: September 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The investigators want to work on compassion, understood as the recognition of the suffering of others that motivates us to try to alleviate it. The goal of this Multicenter project, with a mixed sequential transformative methodology, is to analyze the impact of a participatory process of awareness and reflection on compassion, in the face of end-of-life processes, in adolescents aged 12-23 years in 6 Spanish provinces, and to understand how the participatory process can transform and improve their compassion. As the adolescents must be the protagonists of change, the study will be conducted with students enrolled in one public secondary school and in one degree in a public University, that belongs to the same "health area" in each province. The investigators also include families' and teachers' knowledge of the context because it can support the interventions of change proposals. Compassion will be assessed using the Compassion for the Lives of Others Scale (COOLS), comprising 26 items. Similarly, adolescents' attitudes toward death are another important concept and will be explored through the Death Anxiety Scale (DAS), which has 15 questions. Both scales will be distributed to the adolescents, requesting their permission anonymously. After the survey, a second phase will start with a Participatory Action Research (PAR) with different activities. The objective is to generate awareness of the need to improve it, allowing the participants to design the interventions, based on evidence-based proposals (cinema forum, colloquiums with testimonies of volunteers accompanying palliative patients, organization of Death Cafe, artistic and literary activities, generation of grief groups, etc.). At the end of the project, the investigators will evaluate the adolescent compassion level and create discussion groups again to understand the impact of the interventions. With this project, the investigators will empower new generations of people to encourage, facilitate, support, and celebrate mutual care and family and community development in end-of-life processes. The translation and implications of the results for clinical practice will contribute to reducing inequalities in health research in a vulnerable group of special interest, especially when treatments can do nothing for their survival but with interventions such as those in this study, the investigators can ensure quality and dignity of life as long as there is life.

NCT ID: NCT06285305 Not yet recruiting - Intensive Care Unit Clinical Trials

Surgical ICU Nurses' Attitudes on End-of-Life Care

Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This study aims to explore the attitudes and behaviors of nurses working in surgical intensive care units (ICUs) towards end-of-life care, alongside identifying the barriers they face in providing such care. Despite the universal need for end-of-life care, with an estimated 56.8 million people requiring it annually, only a fraction receive adequate services. The concept of a "good death" has evolved, now emphasizing patient and family wishes, and aligning with clinical, cultural, and ethical standards. In the U.S., a significant portion of deaths occur in hospitals, often involving surgical interventions in the final stages of life. Nurses in ICUs play a crucial role in delivering end-of-life care, making their attitudes and behaviors pivotal to the quality of care provided. Previous studies have indicated a positive correlation between nurses' attitudes towards end-of-life care and their ethical conduct in care delivery. However, research specifically focusing on surgical ICU nurses and the challenges they encounter in end-of-life care is limited. This study seeks to fill that gap, enhancing understanding of the factors that influence end-of-life care in surgical ICUs and potentially guiding improvements in care practices and policy.

NCT ID: NCT06269692 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Myocardial Infarction

MAgnetic Resonance Imaging-guided implanTation of Cardioverter DEFibrillators

SMART-DEF
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICD) are currently recommended for the primary prevention of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in patients with a remote (>6 weeks) myocardial infarction (MI) and a low (≤35%) left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). Ventricular tachycardia (VT) and/or ventricular fibrillation (VF), which are responsible for most SCDs, result from the presence of surviving myocytes embedded within fibrotic MI-scar. The presence of these surviving myocytes, as well as their specific arrhythmic characteristics, is not captured by LVEF. Hence, the use of LVEF as a unique risk-stratifier of SCD results in a low proportion (17 to 31%) of appropriate ICD device therapy at 2 years. Consequently, most patients with a prophylactic ICD do not present VT/VF requiring ICD therapy prior to their first-ICD battery depletion. Thus, many patients are exposed to ICD complications, such as inappropriate shocks, without deriving any health benefit. Therefore, the current implantation strategy of prophylactic ICDs, based on LVEF only, needs to be improved in post-MI patients.

NCT ID: NCT06259357 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Lung Transplant Failure

Prone Positioning in Neurologically Deceased Potential Organ Donors to Improve Donor Lung Function and Lung Transplant Recipient Outcomes

P-POD
Start date: August 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the practicality of performing a future, large-scale study. The future study will look at the effect of mechanical ventilation in neurologically deceased (brain-dead) lung donors who are positioned to lay flat on their stomach (prone position), compared to donors who are positioned to lay flat on their back (supine position). The study will also look at the potential impact of prone positioning of the donor on transplant recipients of the study organs. The investigators are doing this study because the investigators want to increase the availability of donor lungs for lung transplant. Lung transplant is a life-saving treatment for individuals with lung disease, but there are not enough donated lungs to meet demand. Researchers are looking for better ways of preventing donated lungs from becoming unsuitable for transplant. Because of this, the goal of our study is to test whether prone positioning in neurologically deceased (brain-dead) lung donors can improve donor lung function and decrease complications, potentially increasing the number of donor lungs that can be used for transplant.