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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT06161649
Other study ID # 202201890B0
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date November 21, 2023
Est. completion date July 31, 2026

Study information

Verified date December 2023
Source Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Contact MIN-HUI LIU, RN, PhD
Phone 0224313131
Email min4108@cgmh.org.tw
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Heart failure (HF) is an incurable and complex disease syndrome with sophisticated disease trajectories. The guideline for HF management suggests that treatment should include adequate education to help patients have better self-management ability, and improve their quality of life and prognosis. However, how to provide massive amount of HF patients a continuous, complete and individualized disease care education from hospitalization, post-discharge, to home for months is a difficult problem. This study plans to develop an automated and intelligent education system for HF on the mobile device "Line" platform. Through this platform, we hope to make the HF education continuous for 3 months from hospital to post-discharge period. We hypothesize that (1) this intervention can improve knowledge, self-care, emotional stress, self-efficacy, quality of life and disease outcomes in patients of HF; (2) the system developed in this study can reduce the hours of nursing work while improve the quality of education and become the best clinical auxiliary education tool.


Description:

Study background Heart failure is a complex disease syndrome, and patients often suffer from multiple chronic diseases. Faced with the problem of disease symptoms, if patients do not have sufficient care knowledge, patients often mistakenly think that it is related to aging, and may even delay medical treatment, resulting in the need for hospitalization when it worsens. Emergency treatment may even deal with respiratory failure in severe cases. Such repeated hospitalizations will affect the quality of life and lead to poor disease prognosis for patients. Heart failure treatment guidelines have recommended that in addition to the use of standard drugs for disease treatment, systematic and structured disease education should be provided continuously during hospitalization and after discharge to help patients effectively implement disease self-management and improve the quality of disease care, quality of life and life satisfaction. Interventional studies and comprehensive literature review data have also confirmed that disease education provided by nursing staff can significantly improve the knowledge, behavior, self-efficacy, quality of life, and reduce re-hospitalization of heart failure patients. Due to the high fluctuations in the course of heart failure and the interlocking influence of multiple comorbidities, disease care information should be provided not only during hospitalization, but also during the period of discharge and at home after the acute phase. Facing complex and ever-changing disease troubles often lead to overwhelming anxiety and negative emotional stress. For heart failure patients, it is necessary to provide individualized and continuous disease care information from hospitalization, discharge to home during the chronic stage of the disease. Educational navigation helps patients have good self-efficacy to perform self-disease management at home, and then learn to coexist with the disease and obtain a better quality of life with the disease. In recent years, during the epidemic of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), in order to prevent the spread of the virus, disease prevention and control organizations have recommended care and management strategies for chronic diseases through remote and other mobile health care Internet platforms. Care services should be provided to maintain the continuity of nursing education in the case of zero contact. In a survey study, it was found that information sharing through social networks during the epidemic was positively helpful for patients' self-care. It can be seen that it is acceptable to use portable mobile phones for educational interaction on heart failure. Unfortunately, most of the current applications still monitor patients' physiological parameters such as blood pressure, pulse, weight, heart rhythm and other data. Mobile devices are mainly used to predict disease risk, and the provision of care information mainly uses SMS notifications to remind return visits, or simple data responses based on the results of physiological parameters. However, these require long-term measurement data to generate feedback. Since learning is a kind of interpersonal interaction, when providing disease information, if text is simply sent through text messages, patients with insufficient knowledge and literacy may not be able to identify the key points that really need to be learned. In addition, it is fixed and not personalized. The education system cannot produce substantial effects. In the ever-changing medical environment of the epidemic, how to enable heart failure patients to continue to receive complete disease care education from hospitalization, discharge to home is a difficult problem. Because investigators have spent two years in the past working to develop an APP software platform. This platform has an automated import system, a combination of personalized educational video software, video-specific examination questions, and learning evaluation. It measures the function of the mechanism, but it still lacks intelligent performance. In addition, our heart failure center has 15 years of clinical care resources and has completed hundreds of educational videos and a tracking database of long-term patient phone interviews. Investigators hope to use cluster analysis to classify the original data. In order to explore the needs of patients at different times and achieve intelligent docking of needs and educational videos, investigators plan to develop an automated and intelligent educational assistance system for heart failure on the mobile device "Line" platform, hoping to use the assistance system in mobile devices. The intervention continues to extend heart failure disease education from the hospital to the home follow-up period, so that patients can have a sufficient disease learning process, acquire effective self-care abilities, and thereby improve their quality of life. It is also hoped that the system developed through this research can help nursing staff meet the different care needs of patients in different disease stages despite busy clinical work. Make education personal and continuous, and reduce the number of nursing work hours while still maintaining educational quality, becoming the best clinical auxiliary tool that can be replicated in education on various diseases. The main themes of the study 1. Exploring the disease care information that heart failure patients need at different disease stages 2. Establish a continuous automated intelligent mobile education system for heart failure. 3. Participate and explore the effect of the use of continuous automated intelligent mobile education system on disease knowledge and self-care behavior of heart failure patients. 4. To explore the impact of the use of continuous automated intelligent mobile education system on anxiety and depression in patients with heart failure. 5. To explore the effectiveness of the use of continuous automated intelligent mobile education system on the self-efficacy of heart failure patients. 6. To explore the effectiveness of the use of continuous automated intelligent mobile education system on the quality of life of patients with heart failure. 7. To explore the effect of the use of continuous automated intelligent mobile education system on the six-month to one-year disease prognosis of heart failure patients. Study Methods According to the purpose of the research, this research plan uses a randomized controlled intervention research design method to implement and complete the research plan over a three-year period. The following is a description of the progress of the research plan in each year: Research design Research plan This study adopts a randomized two-group pre-test and post-test experimental design to compare the effectiveness of using an automated intelligent educational software system on the self-efficacy and quality of life of patients with heart failure. Research objects and places The first stage of this research is to complete the continuous automated intelligent mobile education system (first year). The research subjects in the second and third years of this study are selected through purposive sampling, and the subjects are patients diagnosed with heart failure in a regional teaching hospital or outpatient clinic in the north Taiwan. The conditions for inclusion and exclusion of research subjects are described in another section. Number of samples in the second to third years In this study, participants are divided into intervention groups and control groups, and each receives five questionnaires. The estimated sample number is set with an α value of .05 and a power of .8. It is estimated that the intervention group and the control group will receive 57 cases each, totaling 114 people. It is considered that there will be a 20% attrition rate during the follow-up intervention period. Thus, the estimated sample size is 138 people. Study tools 1. First year: The reliability and validity evaluation method of the educational videos in the system adopts the "Education System" developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). The Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool (PEMAT) evaluates the understandability and feasibility of educational videos. This tool has two aspects, namely understandability and feasibility. 2. Two to three years: The second phase of this study is mainly to test the effectiveness of the continuous automated intelligent mobile education system intervention program on the disease knowledge, emotional stress, self-efficacy and quality of life of heart failure patients. Structured questionnaires are adopted, including a total of six questionnaires, namely basic personal information questionnaire, heart failure knowledge scale, heart failure self-care scale, hospital anxiety and depression scale, self-efficacy scale, and quality of life scale and service satisfaction scale, as listed up below. Intervention measures (second to third years) Introduction to the continuous automated intelligent education system: This system is developed by Liu Min Hui and Professor Wang Chao-Hung from Keelung Chang Gung Memorial Heart Failure Center. The description of the confidentiality methods, information security measures, and database storage and management measures for network information security subjects is as follows: 1. Confidentiality of Subject Information 2. Cloud data backup 3. Information security measures 4. Database storage and management measures 5. Intellectual property rights in producing health education multimedia to protect medical staff 6. Functional interface of this automated intelligent education software system Research steps The subjects are randomly assigned to the intervention group (receiving the automated intelligent education software system) and the control group (receiving the original medical care method), and the disease prognosis of the two groups is tracked six to twelve months after discharge (re- hospitalizations and deaths). The following is a description of the admission and care process for the intervention group and the control groups: 1. Intervention group (accepting the operation process of automated intelligent education software system): 1. Execute registration and qualification review 2. Automated smart education interaction At the same time, the patient will receive a personal disease self-care education manual, and will get the contact number of the case manager in case the patients encounter emergencies or disease care needs at home (the patient can call for consultation on home care for diseases if the patient want). 2. Control group: After confirming that the diagnosis of heart failure is met, the patient will receive 10-15 minutes of disease care education from a nurse when the patient receives the case. At the same time, the patient will receive a personal disease self-care education manual, and will get the contact number of the case manager in case the patients encounter emergencies or disease care needs at home (the patient can call for consultation on home care for diseases if the patient want). Data analysis Data are collected at 5 time points starting from enroll to 6 months. For assessment, a few questionnaires are used, including Heart Failure knowledge scale, self-care of heart failure index, hospital anxiety and depression scale, self-efficacy scale, quality of life scale and satisfaction scale. Data analysis is performed with SPSS 22.0 software. Statistical analysis includes descriptive statistics, cluster analysis, independent samples t-test, single factor Analysis of variance one-way ANOVA, and generalized estimating equations (generalized estimating equations, GEE).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 138
Est. completion date July 31, 2026
Est. primary completion date July 31, 2026
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 20 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Patients with a diagnosis of heart failure - Patients with age >= 20 years old - patients with clear consciousness - Patients who can communicate with by Chinese or Taiwanese, and are willing to participate this study Exclusion Criteria: - patients who are long-term bedridden, or living dependent of others - patients who have severe psychological disease, or severe cognitive dysfunction - patients without utilizing smartphone or internet

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
accepting the operation process of automated intelligent education software system
Execute registration and qualification review Automated smart education interaction

Locations

Country Name City State
Taiwan Chang Gung Memorial Hospital Keelung

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Chang Gung Memorial Hospital

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Taiwan, 

References & Publications (38)

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* Note: There are 38 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Composite events of one-year Re-Hospitalization and all-cause death Follow-up begins after enroll. Follow-up data are prospectively obtained every month from hospital records, personal communication with patients' physicians, telephone interviews, and records of regular visits to staff physicians' outpatient clinics. All-cause death is chosen as an endpoint because of the inter- relationship of heart failure with many other comorbidities in the patient cohort. Re-hospitalization is defined as a re-hospitalization due to worsening heart failure. In the statistical analysis for outcomes, composite events combining heart failure-related re-hospitalization and all-cause death will be estimated. Based on these two different endpoints, time to the first event was analyzed. 1 year
Primary Heart Failure knowledge scale The HF knowledge scale has 15 questions, self-administered questionnaire that covers items concerning HF knowledge in general, knowledge on HF treatment (including diet and fluid restriction) and HF symptoms and symptom recognition. For each item, patients can choose from three options, with one of the options being the correct answer. The scale has a minimum score of 0 (no knowledge) and a maximum score of 15 points (optimal knowledge). 6 month
Primary Self-Care of Heart Failure Index (SCHFI) SCHFI Version 6.2 has 22 items rated on a 4-point response scale, and divided into the following three scales: self-care maintenance, self-care management, and self-care confidence. The total score for each separate scale is standardized from zero to 100. Higher scores indicating higher contribution to self-care. 6 month
Primary Hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS) The hospital anxiety and depression scale has 14 items. Seven of the items indicate anxiety and the remaining seven items indicate depression. The answer format offers four response options, which are scored with values ranging from 0 to 3. This results in scale values between 0 and 21 for each scale. The original test authors defined three ranges for both of the scales: 0-7 (non-cases), 8-10 (doubtful cases), and 11-21(cases). 6 month
Primary Cardiac Self efficacy questionnaire The core self-evaluations scale has 13 questions. A 5-point Likert scale was used, ranging from 1 (not at all confident) to 5 (very confident), a higher score indicates higher cardiac self-efficacy. Each question asks the patient to rate their level of confidence that using a five-point Likert scale. A score of 1 indicates "not at all", 2 "somewhat confident", 3 "moderately confident", 4 "very confident", and 5 "completely confident". The cardiac self-efficacy questionnaire has 13 items and the total score range is 0 to 65 points, with higher scores indicating greater self-efficacy. 6 month
Primary Minnesota Living With Heart Failure questionnaire The MLHF questionnaire is a disease-specific questionnaire designed to measure quality of life in patients with heart failure. This questionnaire is scored using a 5-point Likert scale and includes two subscales that address the physical and emotional domains, respectively. The questionnaire aims to reveal how patients feel about the changes in life caused by heart failure and symptom treatment during the past 1-month period. Each of the 21 questions in the questionnaire is scored from 0 to 5, with the total score range for the MLHF ranging from 0 to 105. Higher scores correlate with poorer quality of life. 6 month
Primary Service satisfaction scale The service satisfaction scale was developed by the researcher to understand the subjects' satisfaction with the use of the automated mobile education system or traditional outpatient care. It has 10 questions in total. 6 month
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