Family Caregivers Clinical Trial
— SHARE-CCOfficial title:
Support, Health, Activities, Resources, and Education for Persons With Chronic Conditions and Their Family Caregivers: SHARE-Chronic Conditions (SHARE-CC)
Verified date | August 2020 |
Source | Benjamin Rose Institute on Aging |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
SHARE-CC is an intervention for families facing the challenges of chronic conditions. SHARE-CC (Support, Help, Activities, Resources, and Education) addresses the need for both members of a care dyad to be actively involved in current and future care planning. This intervention aims to increase knowledge of services, improve communication skills and well-being, and facilitate the understanding of care values and preferences in order to create a mutually agreed upon care plan. This intervention will be tested in a randomized control trial.
Status | Withdrawn |
Enrollment | 0 |
Est. completion date | August 31, 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | August 31, 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: PWCC: - Living in geographic area of organizations delivering service - Living at home rather than in an institutional setting - Have a family CG as defined below - Confirmed diagnosis of at least one chronic illness (e.g., heart disease, diabetes, COPD, arthritis, kidney disease, stroke, HIV-AIDS, etc.) - Require assistance with two or more activities of daily living (e.g., shopping, managing medications, dressing) or receives help with complex medical care tasks (e.g., wound care, preparing special meals); and - Short Blessed error score between 0 and 6 demonstrating normal cognitive function. For CGs to be eligible • must be the PWCC's spouse/partner, adult child, in-law, grandchild, step-child, or other close family member who has or will have primary responsibility for providing assistance to the PWCC Exclusion Criteria: - Out of geographic areas - a primary diagnosis of a neurocognitive disorder (e.g. Alzheimer's Disease or related dementia) - a mental health condition (e.g., schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression) - a traumatic brain injury, - intellectual or developmental disability - individuals experiencing extreme difficulty adjusting and coping to the diagnosis - individuals in the terminal phase of a chronic condition (i.e., eligible for Hospice). |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Benjamin Rose Institute on Aging | Cleveland | Ohio |
United States | Geriatric Care Consultant | Ridgewood | New Jersey |
United States | Southern Caregiver Resource Center | San Diego | California |
United States | Family Caregiver Alliance | San Francisco | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Benjamin Rose Institute on Aging |
United States,
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* Note: There are 17 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Change from Baseline Partners in Health Scale at 4 months | An 11-item scale that measures a person's perception of their level of chronic condition(s) self-management using a 9-point rating scale, with responses ranging from 0=very good to 8=very poor. | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Other | Change from Baseline Care Values Scale at 4 months | A 25-item scale that measures the patient's and caregiver's perceptions of the patient's thoughts and feelings about what is most important to them should they need care in the future related to six specific care values (response options include: very important, somewhat important, not so important). | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Other | Change from Baseline Leisure and Healthy Behaviors Scale at 4 months | The Leisure Scale measures how often the respondent engaged in 14 different activities (i.e., go shopping, play games). Response options range from 1 (not at all) to 3 (often). The 7-item Healthy Behaviors Scale measures how often the respondent engaged in a variety of health related behaviors (i.e., you got an adequate amount of sleep, you ate too much or too little). | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Other | Change from Baseline Preferences for Care Tasks Scale at 4 months | Patients and caregiver's perceptions of the patient's preferences for who they would prefer to help them with 19 care tasks (i.e., shopping, bathing) if they needed assistance in the future. The responses options include: caregiver, other family or friends, and paid providers. | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Primary | Change from Baseline Service Availability Measure (SAM) at 4 months | Asks caregiver if they or their care partner have used any of the 14 services listed (i.e., counseling, support group, respite). If a caregiver has not used a service then their knowledge of the availability of that service is measured | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Primary | Change from Baseline Emotional-Intimacy Disruptive Behavior Scale at 4 months | Assesses the extent to which a person engaged in eight behaviors during the past month related to withholding or distorting information about their symptoms and feelings to protect their partner from worrying (i.e., how often have you acted more cheerful than you feel?). | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Primary | Change from Baseline Positive Affect and Negative Affect scales (DQoL) at 4 months | To measures affect, we will use the Positive Affect (6 items) and Negative Affect (9 items) scales of the Dementia Quality of Life Instrument (DQoL; Brod et al., 1999), modified to include only the positive and negative affect subscales in order to reduce response burden | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline Dyadic Relationship Scale at 4 months | The Dyadic Relationship Scale includes the Positive Dyadic Interactions and Negative Dyadic Strain subscales. | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) at 4 months | A 20-item measure that asks the respondent to rate how often they experienced symptoms of depression in the past week (i.e., restless sleep). Scores range from 0-60, with scores of 16 or more indicating risk for clinical depression | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline Health Care Utilization at 4 months | Four single items that measure self-reported physician visits, hospital emergency room visits, and overnight hospital stays in the past four months. | Measured at baseline and 4 months later | |
Secondary | Change from Baseline Disagreements Scale at 4 months | The Disagreements Scale asks respondents five questions about whether they agree or disagree with their care partner about planning, finances, deciding where to go, planning for care, etc. | Measured at baseline and 4 months later |
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