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Caregiver Burden clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04922632 Terminated - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Data-driven Approaches to Healthcare Provider Resilience & Burnout During COVID-19

Start date: February 21, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The United States is battling dual pandemics: healthcare provider (HCP) exhaustion and COVID-19. The COVID-19 pandemic death toll has surpassed 595,000 and continues to climb as the worldwide outbreak continues. Moreover, we have yet to understand the health impacts of "long-COVID". As evidenced by the national burnout epidemic in HCPs, persistent workplace stress not only impacts personal provider wellbeing, but also influences effective practice and patient outcomes. To address this need, we propose a 4-year, multi-site, four-arm parallel-group randomized clinical trial (RCT) comparing 2 non-pharmacological interventions: Transcendental Meditation (TM) and Experience Resolution Methodology (ERM) to Treatment as Usual (TAU). Participation in this study lasts up to 24 months for enrolled participants and is considered minimal risks.

NCT ID: NCT02550886 Terminated - Pain Clinical Trials

Anticipated Versus Actual Patient and Caregiver Burden Following Ambulatory Orthopedic Surgery

Work Burden
Start date: December 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In 2011, 38.6 million hospital stays occurred in the United States at a cost of $387.2 billion. 47.9 percent involved hospitalizations during which surgical procedures were performed. Orthopedic procedures constituted the most frequently performed and most costly of operating room procedures. As the healthcare climate in the United States continues to change, there is a trend towards providing effective care in a fiscally conservative manner. Central to this strategy is the shift towards increasing ambulatory surgical procedures from surgeries requiring post-operative admission for patients. While savings to hospitals and third-party payers are implied, there may be an unrecognized increase in financial, physical, and psychosocial post-operative costs to patients undergoing ambulatory surgery and to their caregivers. Rawal et al., and McGarth and colleagues have found that patients undergoing orthopedic procedures had moderate to severe post-operative pain. We propose to present a survey to patients and their caregivers before surgery and at multiple timepoints post-operatively to acquire information on the impacts of ambulatory orthopedic surgery. In addition to assessing post-operative pain, this study serves to examine various other possible burdens to patients that have not been previously evaluated in this patient population. REFERENCES McGarth B, Elgendy H, Chung F, Kamming D, Curti B, King S. Thirty percent of patients have a moderate to severe pain 24 hr after ambulatory surgery: a survey of 5,703 patients. Can J Anesth. 2004; 51:886-891. Rawal N, Hylander J, Nydahl P, Olofsson I, Gupta A. Survey of postoperative analgesia following ambulatory surgery. Acta Anesthesiol Scand. 1997; 41:1017-1022.