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Geriatric Assessment clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05462977 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Rhythmically Entrained Exercise in Community-Dwelling Older Adults

REECO
Start date: May 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro conduct a single-arm intervention trial to investigate the efficacy of a music-based group exercise program for community-dwelling older adults. Up to forty participants will be recruited to participate in a music-based light-to-moderate intensity group exercise program for 20 weeks (30 - 40 min/day, up to 6 days/week), which is designed for older adults with or without functional limitations to exercise with chairs for the improvement of aerobic capacity, upper and lower body strength, and balance control at a gradually increasing pace. During the exercise sessions, participants will be trained to move in time with music playlists in synchronous tempos. Primary outcomes are cognitive performance, mobility, and health-related quality of life measured before and after the intervention. Secondary outcomes are adherence to the exercise program as a potential mediator of the treatment.

NCT ID: NCT05447533 Completed - Aged Clinical Trials

Clostridioides Difficile and Frailty

CLODIFRAIL
Start date: September 16, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

CDI is a major cause of antibiotics-associated diarrhoea. More than half of the patients affected are 70 years or older and frail. Mortality among older patients with CDI is high. Faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is a life-saving therapy which reduce symptom duration and mortality. The FMT procedure usually requires hospital attendance, and frail old patients often are too weak to tolerate transportation to hospital and may therefore be withheld treatment. The overall aim of the present project is to investigate whether a multimodal geriatric assessment, treatment and follow-up of frail older patients with CDI can improve patient survival compared with standard care. In particular, it is explored whether an expanded collaboration between the geriatric wards, early clinical assessment and home treatment with FMT contribute to increased patient survival rates.

NCT ID: NCT05090241 Completed - Clinical trials for Frail Elderly Syndrome

Frailty Prevention in Elders From Reunion Island

5P-ECHELLE
Start date: November 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In Reunion Island, people encounter environmental and social conditions leading to premature ageing and subsequent frailty. The study evaluates tools, supported by the latest scientific advances in "machine learning" to detect, identify and measure frailty in order to give health professionals the means to act early through preventive actions.

NCT ID: NCT04888884 Completed - Frailty Clinical Trials

Loss of Independence - a Rapid Alternative to Frailty Screening in a Swedish ED Setting

Start date: September 27, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This prospective observational study will investigate the correlation of a surrogate marker of frailty in relation to serious outcomes. Serious outcomes are defined as: mortality within 30 days, admission to hospital, length of stay in the Emergency Department (ED), in-hospital Length of Stay and revisits to the ED. The exposure, frailty, will be assessed according to Loss of Independence (LOI) a possible low-cost quick tool to identify frailty in patients. The study population will be ED patients, >65 years of age in a Swedish regional health care system (Region Östergötland, Sweden), comprising three EDs in Linköping, Norrköping and Motala. The outcomes will be compared according to the degree of frailty and censored over 7, 30 and 90 days.

NCT ID: NCT04877028 Completed - Frailty Clinical Trials

Frailty Screening in the Swedish Emergency Department Setting

Start date: May 17, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This prospective observational study will investigate the correlation of frailty in relation to serious outcomes. Serious outcomes are defined as: mortality within 30 days, admission to hospital, length of stay in the Emergency Department(ED), in hospital length of stay and revisits to the ED. The exposure, frailty, will be assessed according to Clinical Frailty Scale. ED patients >65 years of age in a Swedish regional health care system (Region Östergötland, Sweden) comprising three EDs in Linköping, Norrköping and Motala. The outcomes will be compared according to the degree of frailty and censored over 7, 30 and 90 days respectively.

NCT ID: NCT03814213 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

Effect of Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment on Short-time Mortality in Elderly Cancer Patients

Start date: January 16, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Older cancer patients referred to Oncology outpatient Clinic at Aarhus University Hospital have for a period been offered Comprehensive geriatric Assessment (CGA) as part of a routine practice. Oncology Department was responsible for planning the CGA. A number of patients did however not recieve this offer as planning failed. This Group of patients will be compared to patients recieving Geriatric assessment. Patients recieving CGA is part of a Randomised controlled study (ID: NCT02837679) comparing CGA without 90 days follow-up to CGA with 90 days of Comprehensive geriatric care. Patients are identified from electronic medical files. Data regarding death is obtained from Medical files.

NCT ID: NCT03722017 Completed - Frail Elderly Clinical Trials

Drug Reduction in Older Patients: The DROP Trial

DROP
Start date: October 7, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Anticipated Impact on Veterans Healthcare: Polypharmacy, defined as more than five medications, and hyperpolypharmacy, defined as more than 10 medications, are both common in older patients discharged to nursing homes for short stays. Several recent studies demonstrate the occurrence and potential inappropriateness of polypharmacy among older patients in both VA and non-VA healthcare settings. Other studies have shown that polypharmacy can lead to many harmful events among older community-dwelling and hospitalized populations including decreased medication taking, increased harm due to medications, and increased health care use and costs. Polypharmacy and a ways to measure drug burden have additionally been found to be associated with the development of the following geriatric syndromes: mild dementia, delirium, falls, loss of urine, and unintentional weight loss. The investigators' innovative, patient-centered Drug Reduction in Older Patients (DROP) procedure has significant potential to impact the health of a large population of older Veterans who are vulnerable to poor health outcomes. It is during hospitalization and nursing home care that older patients often acquire new geriatric syndromes and medications and, thus, when deprescribing actions should be initiated by VA care providers. In addition, the clinical care provided during the hospital and SNF stays allows the effects of medication changes to be more closely monitored for safety relative to when the Veteran is at home. Project Objectives: The proposed randomized, controlled trial will evaluate the effects of procedures to reduce medications (DROP) among hospitalized older Veterans discharged to nursing homes using an hybrid study design to inform future efforts to spread it across VA. Project Background/Rationale: Patients discharged to nursing homes for short stays represent the largest group of Medicare beneficiaries discharged to post-hospital services and are a particularly high risk group for loss of independence and other poor clinical outcomes. This investigative team recently completed a VA-funded Quality Improvement Award and a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Innovation Award, both of which provide strong results related to the occurrence of polypharmacy and the relationship between polypharmacy and geriatric syndromes (e.g., medications associated with falls) in this patient population. Based on these data, the investigators developed and pilot-tested a patient-centered deprescribing set of procedures combined with standardized questions for eight geriatric syndromes to be implemented in the hospital and monitored during the nursing home stay. Project Methods: The investigators propose an innovative hybrid study design that will be conducted in one VA hospital. The goal of the proposed DROP intervention is to safely deprescribe medications, as defined by reducing doses or stopping medications, based on a combination of clinical criteria and Veteran preferences. This randomized, controlled trial conducted over three years will evaluate the effects of this hospital-based intervention on medication use, geriatric syndromes, and health status across Veterans' care transitions from the hospital to nursing home to home to include a 90-day follow-up period after leaving the nursing home. The hypothesis is that reducing medications for older Veterans will favorably impact geriatric syndromes. Additionally, the investigators aim to understand Veteran, both VA and non-VA provider and system-level factors that help or hinder how well the deprescribing procedures are implemented to inform future clinical uptake and dissemination throughout the VA.

NCT ID: NCT03681899 Completed - Clinical trials for Geriatric Assessment

Evaluation of Rupture of Galenic Practices at Home in a Population Aged 65 or Older

CRUSHAGE
Start date: September 18, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Elderly people frequently take several medications and are exposed to iatrogenic risks. The oral route is the preferred route of administration. The effectiveness and the safety of the drugs depend in particular on the modes of administration (frequency of the intake, respect of the doses and the galenic ...). However, these modalities are very little known concerning the treatments intake at home in the elderly population. In a health facility welcoming geriatric patients, the rupture of galenic is frequent and favored by swallowing disorders, dependence, the increase in age, the presence of cognitive disorders or psycho-behavioral disorders. The consequences of the rupture of galenic are numerous, concern the patients but also the caregivers who administer the treatments.

NCT ID: NCT02890927 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Diseases

Geriatric-CO-mAnagement for Cardiology Patients in the Hospital

G-COACH
Start date: September 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective of the evaluation study is to determine if geriatric co-management is superior to standard of care in preventing functional decline in older patients admitted for acute heart disease or Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implementation (TAVI) to the cardiology units of the University Hospitals Leuven.

NCT ID: NCT02664454 Completed - Multimorbidity Clinical Trials

Compared Efficacy of Nurse-led and GP-led Geriatric Assessment in PrImary Care

CEPIA
Start date: May 24, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Older patients account for around 10% of the population, of which 57% have a long-term illness, and 33% were admitted in the past year. Geriatric assessment (GA) is a multidimensional assessment of general health status that can help identifying deficiencies and followed by a personalized care plan. Assessment and management of elderly patients is a daily concern for the general practitioner (GP) but conflicting results have been reported so far relating to the clinical impact of GA when applied in the primary care setting. This study protocol aims to assess the effect on morbi-mortality of a complex intervention in patients aged ≥70 years with chronic conditions in primary care. It aims to demonstrate that a GA adapted to primary care, followed by a personalized care plan and combined with successful interprofessional collaboration can improve clinically relevant outcomes in elderly patients with chronic conditions such as one-year overall mortality, unplanned hospital admission, emergency visits, or institutionalization. The CEPIA study will also help addressing the issue of whether an improved benefit could be achieved from a systematic nurse-led or a case-by-case GP-led GA.