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Self Care clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05983497 Recruiting - Compassion Fatigue Clinical Trials

Effect of Self-care Skill Education on the Compassionate Satisfaction and Compassionate Fatigue Among Clinical Nurses Clinical Nurses at HMC

Start date: June 20, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The health of our nurses is perhaps the most important consideration for delivering excellent patient care. The passionate approach of nurses can lead to a lot of fatigue and stress among nurses. Their health is perhaps the most important consideration for delivering excellent patient care. Self-care provides nurses with the framework for managing professional burnout, compassion fatigue, and traumatic stress. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of self-care skill educational intervention on increasing compassion satisfaction and reducing compassionate fatigue among clinical nurses. The interactive Self-care skill education will be administrated and evaluated.

NCT ID: NCT05806606 Recruiting - Heart Failure Clinical Trials

Effect and Cost Effectiveness of a Dyadic Empowerment-based Heart Failure Management Program for Self-care

Start date: April 17, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Global population aging has drastically increased healthcare spending worldwide, with the greatest portion going to hospital and community health services. Heart failure (HF), as the final form of many cardiovascular diseases resulting from insufficient myocardial pumping. Ineffective self-care is consistently identified as the major modifiable risk factor for HF decompensation requiring hospitalization. It refers to an active cognitive process that influence patients' engagement in self-care maintenance, symptom perception and self-care management. However, current studies pay much focus on interventions such as motivational interviewing and behavioural activation to enhance the HF-related self-care and health outcomes which only produces short-term benefits. In fact, the lack of a sustainable effect from the self-care supportive interventions might be related the use of patient-centric design in these studies, which totally ignores the fact that HF management takes place in a dyadic context. To advance, active strategies were adopted to mobilize collaborative effort of the dyad in actual disease management. This study aims to evaluate the effects and cost-effectiveness of a Dyadic empowerment-based Heart Failure Management Program (De-HF) for self-care, health outcomes, and health service utilization among HF patients who require family support after hospital discharge. The De-HF program is based on the Theory of Dyadic Illness Management to enhance the congruence in illness perception and active dyadic collaboration in managing HF via both face-to-face and online platforms.

NCT ID: NCT05788978 Recruiting - Endometriosis Clinical Trials

Self-Care Behaviors Scale in Endometriosis

Start date: March 16, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In this study, it was aimed to develop a reliable and valid scale to measure the self-care behaviors of women with endometriosis.

NCT ID: NCT05738109 Recruiting - Mental Health Clinical Trials

Evaluating the Efficacy of a 91-day Self-talk Mental Health Self-care Journal

Start date: September 13, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

1. Does a 91-day self-talk journal intervention improve outcomes of self-criticism, self-esteem, automatic negative self-statements, and mental health among participants using the journal over wait-list control? 2. What is the adherence rate to a 91-day self-talk journal intervention? 3. What were participants' experience(s) of using a 91-day self-talk journal?

NCT ID: NCT05683652 Recruiting - Immunotherapy Clinical Trials

The Effect of Education and Telephone Follow-up Given to Cancer Patients Receiving Immunotherapy on Symptom Management and Self-care Power

Start date: June 30, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study, it was aimed to evaluate the effects of education and telephone follow-up given to cancer patients receiving immunotherapy on symptom management and self-care power. It is expected that the education given to the patients who will receive immunotherapy for the first time and the monitoring by phone, prevention of immunotherapy-related side effects, early recognition, and follow-up will reduce unnecessary hospital admissions and increase the self-care power of the patient.