General Health Status Clinical Trial
Official title:
Preventative OMT and the Nursing Home Patient
This pilot research study will investigate the possible benefit that elderly nursing home patients may receive from regular Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine (OMM) care during the winter months. The study is based on the osteopathic philosophies that structure and function are interrelated and that the body has self-healing mechanisms. The body is expected to have optimized ability to heal itself "when all its parts are in place" (AT Still). This study is looking at subject population for whom their ability to take care of themselves is diminished by their underlying diseases. Based on the osteopathic philosophies, optimization of the nursing home patient's physical structure through osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT) should enhance their body's homeostatic mechanisms. This study is assessing the validity of these philosophies by looking at the effect of OMT on the global health of these individuals.
This study will randomly assign 36 nursing home patients from two Kirksville nursing homes
into three groups of twelve subjects: 1) treatment as usual (TAU) control group; 2) light
touch (LT) group, and 3) standard OMT group.
This study will begin with rolling admission of volunteer nursing home patients starting in
October 2009. Subjects in the LT and OMT group would receive focused musculoskeletal
evaluations twice a month for 5 months (10 visits). The OMT group would also receive an OMT
protocol each visit that would specifically address optimization of homeostatic mechanisms -
balancing autonomic nervous system and improving lymphatic drainage- along with OMT that
would specifically target somatic dysfunction found on that day's evaluation. The LT group
subjects would receive a light touch protocol meant to simulate OMT. The TAU group will
receive no intervention. The protocol period will end for all subjects by March 2010. All
osteopathic examinations, assessments, and treatments will be performed at the participating
nursing homes.
Throughout the protocol period, at the end of the winter (March 2010), and three months later
(June 2010), retrospective chart reviews will be conducted on all subjects. All cause
morbidity and mortality for all subjects will be assessed by monitoring their medications,
health history changes, and hospitalizations.
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Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT00032461 -
Compare the Medical Conditions of Gulf War Veterans to Non-Deployed Veterans
|
N/A |