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Health Care Utilization clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05317468 Recruiting - Contraception Clinical Trials

Assessing Satisfaction With Contraceptive Counseling Using Telephone Versus Video Telehealth Visits

Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Contraceptive Choice Center (C3) will compare the patient experience between patients receiving contraceptive counseling using a telephone versus video telehealth model.

NCT ID: NCT05282173 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Community Health Worker Training to Reduce Depression and Substance Use Stigma in TB/HIV Care in South Africa

Siyakhana
Start date: June 8, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Poor engagement in care contributes to HIV- and TB-related morbidity and mortality in South Africa (SA). Community health workers (CHWs) are frontline lay health workers who work to re-engage patients who are lost to follow-up (LTFU) in HIV/TB care. Patients with depression and substance use (SU) have a greater likelihood of being LTFU in HIV/TB care, and there is evidence that CHWs may exhibit stigma towards these patients. When CHWs have negative attitudes towards these patients, on average they spend less time with these patients, are less likely to implement evidence-based practices, and deliver less patient-centered care. Therefore, this purpose of this study is to examine the implementation and preliminary effectiveness of a brief training ("Siyakhana"). The purpose of this training is to provide CHWs with psychoeducation, skills, and support around working with HIV/TB patients with depression/SU. The investigators will assess the training's implementation and changes in CHWs' stigma towards HIV/TB patients with depression/SU.

NCT ID: NCT05245370 Completed - Clinical trials for Health Care Utilization

Modifying Treatment Expectations in Depression: the Role of Social Learning

Start date: January 14, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Research has shown that treatment expectations play a major role in the course of mental disorders and that positive expectations have a beneficial impact on treatment outcomes. Expectations can develop in different ways, whereby an emerging body of research has shown that social learning plays a significant role in this process. To date, most studies have investigated the impact of social learning on treatment expectations in the context of pain relief. Little is known about the impact of social learning in the psychotherapeutic treatment of depression. Therefore, this study investigates whether treatment expectations regarding the treatment of depression can be modulated via social learning, i.e., showing positive treatment testimonials. Hypotheses: H1: The investigators predict that individuals who are provided with treatment testimonials (experimental groups) show a greater change toward positive treatment expectations compared to individuals who do not view such testimonials (control groups). H2: The investigators predict that individuals provided with treatment testimonials will, compared to the control groups, show a greater change in secondary outcome variables in the following ways: a greater decrease in perceived uncertainty/ barriers; a greater decrease in stigma/ negative attitudes toward psychotherapy; a greater increase in intentions to seek therapy; a greater willingness to try the specific technique described in the videos. H3: Inter-individual differences in the effect of provided testimonials are associated with pre-existing factors: level of depressive symptoms; intolerance of uncertainty; treatment experience; locus of control; general self-efficacy; dispositional optimism and cognitive immunization tendencies. Exploratory questions: 1. An exploratory aim of this study is to assess whether viewing different types of testimonials (clinician delivered; patient-delivered; combination of both) has differential effects on treatment expectation change. 2. Furthermore, the investigators want to assess whether implicit treatment expectations change in a similar pattern as explicit treatment expectations. 3. Based on the results of H1 and H2, the investigators aim to assess possible mechanisms of change: e.g. assess whether a change in treatment expectations is mediated by a decrease in perceived uncertainty or a change in stigma/ attitudes toward therapy.

NCT ID: NCT05176106 Completed - Health Behavior Clinical Trials

Advancing the Health of Rural Communities in Uganda Through Strong Community Health Programs

Start date: August 23, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overarching goal of this study is to improve the health of women and children in rural areas of Uganda through strengthening of the community health workforce, which provides critical health services to the rural poor.

NCT ID: NCT05120843 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Testing Feasibility of Care Coordination and Motivational Interviewing for Women With a Recent Preterm Birth

Start date: February 3, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study continues an adaptation of care coordination to address the needs of women after preterm birth. This is a small single arm open trial designed to test intervention implementation and refine the intervention before ongoing feasibility testing.

NCT ID: NCT05117333 Completed - Health Behavior Clinical Trials

Reminders, Cost Sharing, and Healthcare Use

Start date: October 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators conduct a large-scale randomized controlled trial in Finland by sending three types of information letters to households to examine whether the reminder letters affect healthcare use. All letters remind of the importance of seeking care to treat potential health problems. This study has two primary objectives are: to evaluate the effects of an information nudge reminding on the importance of diagnosing and treating health problems and to evaluate the effects of additionally providing information on the fact that primary care nurse visits have become exempt from copayments. Main outcomes include the number of primary care nurse visits and general practitioner (GP) visits in a six-month follow-up.

NCT ID: NCT05082935 Completed - Health Behavior Clinical Trials

COVID-19: Healthy Oregon (Oregon Saludable): Together We Can (Juntos Podemos) Phase II

OSJP
Start date: September 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The global SARS-CoV-2 pandemic that causes the severe respiratory illness COVID-19 is the worst health crisis that the United States has faced in a century. Although this highly contagious virus has infected millions of Americans already, the disease burdens are disproportionately born by historically underserved populations such as Latinx communities. In Oregon, 13% of the population that is Latinx represents approximately 25.7% of COVID-19 cases and are burdened with more than twice the cases per 100,000 individuals compared to non-Hispanic Oregonians (10,677 versus 4,616, respectively). Furthermore, only 54.9% of eligible Latinx Oregonians are vaccinated compared to the 76.2% statewide vaccination rate. An urgent need exists to reach Oregon's Latinx community to prevent SARS-CoV-2 transmission and increase vaccine acceptance. The overall goal of this study is to implement a Promotores de Salud behavioral health intervention to increase the reach, access, uptake, and impact of testing and vaccination in Latinx communities in Oregon. This project will fully integrate with the National institutes of Health (NIH) Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx) consortium and its Coordination and Data Collection Center (CDCC). The study team will add testing venues based on feedback from the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) and our county and community partners to test if a "partner-optimized venue placement strategy" yields more Latinx individuals tested than placement of sites based upon residential density used in the ongoing testing in Phase I of this study (Clinical Trial ID: NCT04793464). In addition, evaluation of the Promotores de Salud intervention held during testing events will test whether culturally competent education results in greater use of strategies that reduce transmission of COVID-19 at the community and individual level and increases the number of individuals who choose to be vaccinated, as a function of fidelity of the intervention. Over time, this project will help communities institutionalize optimal local testing frameworks supported by University of Oregon laboratory facilities for testing capacity, technical support for testing logistics, and collection of data on health behaviors, testing rates, and sustainability. The resulting structures and systems will be poised for future scale-up to other vulnerable communities and/or for other public health purposes.

NCT ID: NCT05045222 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Health Care Utilization

Economic and Clinical Outcomes of (Whole Exome) Sequencing in Tapestry

ECOST
Start date: October 29, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this research is to learn more about the impact of genetic testing on healthcare costs, clinical care, and quality of life.

NCT ID: NCT05031741 Completed - Clinical trials for Health Care Utilization

Reducing Adolescent Sexual and Mental Health Disparities by Increasing Access to Telemedicine and Mobile Care

Start date: August 5, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Investigators will attend a series of community outreach events that provide/demonstrate telemedicine and the Children's Mercy Mobile Unit which is equipped to provide direct patient care. Investigators will engage up to 12 teen peer leaders to encourage healthcare-seeking behaviors and mobilize their social networks to attend outreach events. At all events, the mobile unit will be available for teens to (a) demonstrate the mobile unit and telehealth experience; (b) learn about Sexual and Reproductive Health/Mental Health (SRH/MH) and local care resources; (c) register for future telemedicine care; (d) acquire free over-the-counter emergency contraception, condoms, and pregnancy tests.

NCT ID: NCT04994691 Completed - Clinical trials for Health Care Utilization

Effect of Varied Outreach Methods on Appointment Scheduling and Appointment Completion Using MyChart

Start date: July 30, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Our objective is to determine the effectiveness of varied outreach methods (e.g. standard versus tailored MyChart messaging) to children age 6-17 years old who are due for a WCC visit and don't have one scheduled in the next 45 days on the outcomes of appointment scheduling and appointment completion.