View clinical trials related to Hospice Care.
Filter by:This research seeks the views of patients who are admitted to hospices and specialist palliative care units (SPCUs) regarding whether they would consider being involved in different types of clinical research. This is a questionnaire based study of inpatients in the North East of England. The results will be used to inform healthcare professionals about the research which patients may or may not be interested in, as well as enabling future research design to be supportive of patient preferences. Many of the interventions used within specialist palliative care lack a strong evidence base with guidelines often based on a mixture of expert opinion, anecdotal evidence or extrapolated from research in other patient groups rather than robust clinical research. Previous studies have highlighted multiple potential barriers to expanding research within the palliative care setting. Barriers include a lack of funding compared to other medical specialties and a lack of institutional capacity. An ongoing barrier to research in this field is that the nature of the population makes patient recruitment to research challenging. This may be associated with professionals in palliative care being reluctant to ask patients if they would want to be involved in research as they feel that it would be inappropriate to potentially burden patients who are very unwell with research which is unlikely to change the disease outcome for the individual. However, many recognise that it is important to understand what patients themselves think about the potential to take part in clinical research. Our main research question will help us to ascertain whether patients admitted under Palliative Medicine in our region would welcome the opportunity to be involved in clinical research. Previous studies have been at a single site with small numbers of patients, whereas our research will aim to recruit a larger number of patients and will be a multi-centre study involving a range of inpatient settings including an independent hospice, two National Health Service (NHS) Palliative Care Units. These centres are across the north-east region (Northumbria and Newcastle) and accept admissions from a mixture of affluent and less affluent areas. It will also involve patients with both malignant and non-malignant disease. Previous studies have not surveyed patients that were described as "too unwell", therefore as a secondary outcome we will be recording how well patients are functionally (by recording performance status- AKPS) to examine if those patients who are most unwell would still want to be involved in research. There is a gap in current knowledge of whether those patients with advanced disease and close to end of life would still find it rewarding to have the opportunity to be involved in research of some sort and whether it is fair to exclude them from being offered opportunities to be involved based on their advanced disease status.
The aim of the study is to assess Prevalence of complementary and alternative therapy use by adult patients from the area of Silesian agglomeration (Poland) with advanced, metastatic cancer disease who were admitted to "Pro Salute" Hospice for ambulatory palliative care between July 2017 and September 2018