Disability or Chronic Disease Leading to Disablement Clinical Trial
Official title:
Co-designing Personalised Aids of Daily Living With Users With Chronic Conditions: a Feasibility Study
Verified date | May 2022 |
Source | Swansea University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
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.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 15 |
Est. completion date | September 30, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | June 30, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Confirmed diagnosis of a long-term chronic condition - Living in the community - Age eighteen years or older - Ability to actively engage in a co-design process, as determined by the referring clinician, including: - Sufficient comprehension of language to engage in meaningful verbal dialogue with the researcher. - Sufficient insight into their condition such that they understand their needs. - Sufficient ability to communicate their needs. - Sufficient ability to retain information between sessions - Currently under the care of healthcare services within Swansea Bay University Health Board - At least three-month post injury/diagnosis at the point of recruitment allowing time for spontaneous recovery and for the person to become aware of their difficulties and the implications of this on their lives Exclusion Criteria: - Receptive or expressive language difficulties, or extremely low memory function that may preclude people from engaging meaningfully - Medically unstable, severe mental health or cognitive difficulties which may preclude meaningful engagement in the study. - Not able to provide informed consent. - Have insufficient access to the internet to engage virtually with the researcher through video conferencing software. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | Swansea Bay University Health Board | Swansea |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Swansea University | Swansea Bay University Health Board |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Resources used | For each participant an estimate of the resources used and costs involved will be calculated. Costs will be calculated based on the number of person-hours required to engage participant and produce device, manufacturing time and material cost of all components required to produce the final device. This will include time for each appointment with the participant, time spent developing and changing the design, and time to create documentation required to comply with quality management system. | Through study completion, an average of 8 months. | |
Primary | Qualitative Feedback - Semi-structured interviews | Semi-structured questions will be used in individual interviews to facilitate an understanding of:
Any change the device(s) provided have had on the participants life Identify components of the co-design methodology that participants like and dislike and changes to it in the future. If co-design has changed any of the barriers to accessing and using assistive technology |
At initial device issue and at 3-months post device issue | |
Secondary | Quebec User Evaluation of Satisfaction with Technical Aids (QUEST 2.0) | A 12-item outcome measure that assesses the user's satisfaction with both the device and service provided in supplying the device. For each item of the questionnaire, a 5-point scale is used, 1 being not satisfied at all and 5 being very satisfied. | At initial device issue and repeated at 3-months post device issue | |
Secondary | Psychosocial Impact of Assistive Devices Scale (PIADS) | A 26-item self-reported questionnaire to assess the effects of an assistive device on three sub-scales: competence, adaptability and self-esteem. For each item of the questionnaire, a 7-point scale is used, ranging from -3 (maximum negative impact) to 3 (maximum positive impact) | At initial device issue and repeated at 3-months post device issue | |
Secondary | Individually Prioritised Problem Assessment (IPPA) | An instrument to assess the effectiveness of assistive technology provision in relation to activities the individual considers most relevant. The participant can select up to 7 problems they experience in everyday life. For each problem the participant assigns two scores, one for the importance of the activity and the second for the difficulty. Both scores are assigned using a 5 point scale: 1 not important to 5 most important and 1 not difficult to 5 too difficult to perform. | At initial appointment and repeated at initial device issue | |
Secondary | Client Service Receipt Inventory (CSRI) | A tool used to capture and record information on health and social care services and resources used by study participants to help estimate the costs of services received. It will be used to calculate the economic cost changes associated with participation in the study.
The inventory asks participants to idenfify the healthcare services they have accessed in the previous 3 months and any medication they are taking relevant to the health condition and challenges of daily living identified. It will also capture demographic information about the participants. The CRSI will measure any changes to services accessed, medication taken and demographic information as a result of participating in this study. |
Completed at the initial assessment and again at the 3-month follow-up assessment |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
NCT06040450 -
The Impact of Outdoor Sports Practice on the Well-Being of Disabled People
|
||
Completed |
NCT04709783 -
Implementing 3-Step Workout for Life in Home Health
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05294029 -
Neuro-Orthopaedic Disorders During Aging in Patients With Neuromotor Disability
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05736328 -
Effect of Lower Extremity Traction on the Popliteal Angle After Percutaneous Needle Tenotomy of the Knee Flexor Muscles.
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT03263169 -
Community-based Personalized Care and QOL
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05713149 -
Treatment of Osteomyelitis-associated Pressure Ulcers by Surgical Flaps and Anti-bacterial Agents
|
||
Completed |
NCT03357302 -
Risk Factors Associated With the Global Burden of Disease in Reunion Island and Comparison With Mainland France and Indian Ocean Countries
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05294068 -
Barriers to Physical Activity in Patients With Cognitive, Neuromotor or Sensory Impairments During Aging
|