View clinical trials related to Family Caregivers.
Filter by:This is a prospective, single-arm, open-label study to assess the impact of the Family Connections (FC) program on various factors including burden, grief and several clinical variables (i.e., depressive symptoms, family functioning, alexithymia, global psychological distress and anger). It specifically targets caregivers of individuals diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). The secondary aim of this research is to identify participant profiles that are more likely to experience improvements or deteriorations in their levels of burden and grief. In this study family members are consecutively recruited from four different Italian mental health services and undergo an assessment that includes the gathering of socio-demographic information and completing a comprehensive battery of self-report questionnaires at three specific time points (i.e., at baseline, at immediately post-intervention and at a 4-month follow-up).
The aim of this study is to determine the effects of animation-based mobile application and simulation-based training methods on tracheal aspiration knowledge and skills of patient relatives who care for patients with tracheostomy/tracheotomy. Experimental pre-test-post-test control group study design was planned.
EYE-TAR(AD+) is an observational study based on the same design as the princeps EYE-TAR(MA) study, but with a larger number of patients and including an additional evaluation of Facial emotion recognition (based on a more ecological material), in order to reinforce conclusions of the study EYE-TAR(MA) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.npg.2020.08.003. The main objective is to confirm that facial emotion recognition can be improved in AD using the "Training of Affect Recognition program" (TAR). The Secondary Objectives are to: Evaluate the impact of the "Training of Affect Recognition program" (TAR) on oculomotor behavior in a situation of social cognition, on behavioral disorders and on caregiver burden. Confirm that improvement in facial emotion recognition is related to modification of observation strategies. Confirm the link between improved recognition of facial emotions, reduced behavioral disorders and caregiver burden.
EYE-TAR(MA)-Follow-Up is a non-interventionel, long-term follow-up study in subjects who participated to the study referred as EYE-TAR(MA) (NCT04730440) EYE-TAR(MA)-Follow-Up aims to evaluate the long-term impacts of the Training of Affect Recognition TAR (an emotion recognition rehabilitation program), on social cognition abilities, evolve gaze strategies, behavioral disorders, and the caregiver's burden in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Subjects who completed EYE-TAR(MA) study, and who have signed informed consent for this follow-up, will be eligible to enroll. They will attend one visit two years post EYE-TAR(MA) study intervention (intervention was TAR, or a "classic" cognitive stimulation program) to undergo the following evaluation: Eye-tracking recording during Ekman Faces task, Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE), Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI), Zarit scale (completed by caregiver).
In this study, we will explore the perspective of family carers of older adults from Turkish and Moroccan origin in Flanders and Brussels, Belgium, concerning advance care planning (ACP), more specifically concerning their knowledge about ACP, their experiences with and their points of view on ACP for their family member and their own preferences regarding how to be involved in the process of ACP for their relatives.
The overall objective of this mixed-methods proposal is to answer the focused research question: What tailoring is necessary and sufficient to achieve optimal engagement with and efficacy of Sleep Healthy Using the Internet (SHUTi) for caregivers? The SHUTi program is a fully-automated Internet-delivered cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) program. We will identify caregiving-related user- and environment characteristics that affect the use and impact of SHUTi, and other Internet interventions more broadly, for caregivers. We will recruit 100 high-intensity caregivers with insomnia to complete a baseline assessment of insomnia and caregiving context. Caregivers will then receive access to SHUTi in an open-label trial. At the end of the 9-week intervention period, caregivers will complete post-assessment and be categorized according to their level of engagement with the 6 SHUTi intervention lessons (or weekly "Cores"). We will test whether caregivers' engagement with SHUTi (i.e., being a non-user vs. incomplete user vs. complete user) is associated with their caregiving-related user characteristics (i.e., caregiving strain, self-efficacy, and guilt) and environment characteristics (i.e., proximity to care recipient; care recipient functional, cognitive, and behavioral status; caregiving tasks). Caregivers' barriers to and motivations for SHUTi engagement will be described from open-ended survey responses specific to participants' level of engagement as part of post-assessment. We will identify non-users' barriers to SHUTi adoption, the extent to which barriers were related to caregiving, and what modifications may have increased their motivation to try SHUTi. We will also identify users' (incomplete and complete) SHUTi usage barriers and motivations, the extent to which these were related to caregiving, and how tailoring may improve usage by increasing salience to caregivers. Thematic coding will also examine how caregivers' recommendations generalize to other evidence-based digital health interventions. Among caregivers using SHUTi, we will test whether the effects of SHUTi on cognitive mechanisms of change targeted by SHUTi (i.e., more adaptive sleep beliefs, internalized sleep locus of control) are associated with differences in caregiving-related user or environment characteristics.
This study aims to evaluate impacts of an emotion recognition rehabilitation program, named Training of Affect Recognition, on social cognition abilities in Alzheimer's disease (AD). In addition, we hypothesis that the effect of this rehabilitation will also evolve gaze strategies, behavioral disorders, and the caregiver's burden.
This study will identify whether - and if so, how - tailoring would increase adoption of and benefit from an interactive internet intervention for insomnia called SHUTi (Sleep Healthy Using the Internet) for cancer caregivers. Participating caregivers' sleep and sleep-related characteristics will be characterized from a baseline assessment; then, caregivers will receive complementary and voluntary access to SHUTi. Among caregivers who choose to use SHUTi, intervention use, perceived appropriateness, and effects on sleep and quality of life will be assessed. Among caregivers who choose not to use SHUTi, reasons and barriers to using the intervention will be assessed.
Using a highly innovative methodology, the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST), the purpose of this study is to pilot test, for the first time, an optimization trial approach to develop and refine the decision partnering skills of family caregivers of persons with newly-diagnosed advanced cancer. Using a 2x2x2 full factorial design, 40 family caregivers of persons with newly-diagnosed advanced cancer will be randomized to receive one or more nurse coach-delivered decision partnering training components, based on the Ottawa Decision Support Framework and Social Support Effectiveness Theory4: 1) psychoeducation on effective decision partnering principles (1 vs. 3 sessions); 2) decision partnering communication training (yes vs. no); and 3) Ottawa Decision Guide training (yes vs. no).
Caring for a family member after a stroke can be very difficult and worsen the physical and mental health of untrained caregivers. The Telephone Assessment and Skill-Building Kit (TASK III) intervention is a unique, comprehensive caregiver intervention program that enables caregivers to develop the necessary skills to manage care for the survivor, while also taking care of themselves. The long-term goal of this study is to offer training and support for family caregivers through an efficacious, cost-effective program.