Clinical Trials Logo

Cardiorespiratory Failure clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cardiorespiratory Failure.

Filter by:
  • Completed  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT04581200 Completed - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

Lift Mobile Mindfulness for COVID-19 Distress Symptoms

LIFTCOVID
Start date: January 25, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized clinical trial (RCT) nested within the NIH PETAL Network's COVID cohort study (BLUE CORAL [Biology and Longitudinal Epidemiology: COVID Observational Study]) of patients hospitalized for COVID-19-related illness. COVID-19 patients enrolled in BLUE CORAL with elevated distress symptoms 1 month post-discharge will be randomized to either the Lift mobile app intervention or a usual care control.

NCT ID: NCT04329702 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiorespiratory Failure

Mobile Coping Skills Training to Improve Cardiorespiratory Failure Survivors' Psychological Distress

Blueprint
Start date: December 3, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a pilot randomized clinical trial involving adult survivors of cardiorespiratory failure treated in intensive care units (ICUs) that is designed to test the acceptability, feasibility, and clinical impact of a coping skills training intervention (Blueprint) delivered via a mobile app. This trial will allow us to determine if new changes to intervention delivery, inclusion criteria, and other factors are successful. It will also inform the development of a next-step efficacy focused trial.

NCT ID: NCT04038567 Completed - Clinical trials for Cardiorespiratory Failure

Optimizing a Mobile Mindfulness Intervention for ICU Survivors

LIFT2
Start date: August 15, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a factorial experimental trial involving adult survivors of cardiorespiratory failure treated in intensive care units (ICUs) that is conceptualized as the Optimization Phase of a multiphase optimization strategy (MOST) framework. This will allow optimization of a mobile mindfulness intervention by comparing eight different iterations across domains including impact on symptoms, feasibility, acceptability, usability, scalability, and cost.