Clinical Trials Logo

Advance Care Planning clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Advance Care Planning.

Filter by:
  • Terminated  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT04881968 Terminated - Clinical trials for Advance Care Planning

EFFECTIVENESS: Hopewell Hospitalist: A Video Game Intervention to Increase Advance Care Planning by Hospitalists

Start date: July 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hopewell Hospitalist is a theory-based adventure video game designed to increase the likelihood that a physician will engage in an advance care planning (ACP) conversation with a patient over the age of 65. Drawing on the theory of narrative engagement, players assume the persona of a hospitalist physician and navigate a series of clinical encounters with seriously-ill patients over the age of 65. Players experience the consequences of having (or not having) ACP conversations in a timely fashion. The planned study is a crossover phase III trial testing the effectiveness of providing physicians with a link to a free version of Hopewell Hospitalist as a means for increasing ACP rates measured by ACP billing frequency.

NCT ID: NCT03229811 Terminated - Clinical trials for Chronic Kidney Diseases

Integrating Conservative Kidney Management Options and Advance Care Planning Into a Pre-Dialysis Educational Program

Start date: October 24, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goals of this work will be to evaluate the preliminary efficacy of a comprehensive pre-dialysis education program on increased knowledge of conservative kidney management and advance care planning among patients with advanced CKD.

NCT ID: NCT02208947 Terminated - Clinical trials for Advance Care Planning

Consumer Engagement to Increase Advance Care Planning

Start date: April 2014
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The specific aims of the project are: 1) to test the effectiveness of consumer-directed financial incentives paired with provider-directed financial incentives, compared to provider-directed financial incentives alone, for increasing advance care planning (ACP) among Medicaid beneficiaries; and 2) to assess perceptions regarding the appropriateness of consumer-directed financial incentives for ACP among study participants. The investigators hypothesize that consumer-directed financial incentives will result in a 15-percentage point absolute increase in the proportion of subjects completing ACP. The investigators do not advance hypotheses about the qualitative component.