Clinical Trials Logo

Multiple Chronic Conditions clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Multiple Chronic Conditions.

Filter by:
  • Enrolling by invitation  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05056493 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Children/Youth With Special Healthcare Needs

Caremap: A Digital Personal Health Record for Complex Care Coordination

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

This study will implement a new mobile application ('app') called Caremap to improve care coordination for patients with complex health needs. The goal is to pilot test the mobile app with patients/families and clinic doctors to gather input on how well the app works and how to make it better. Investigators plan to enroll up to 40 participants from Duke University for this study. The study is sponsored by Duke's Institute for Health Innovation.

NCT ID: NCT04342338 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Chronic Conditions, Multiple

Pharmacist and Family Medicine Physician Collaboration for Pre-Visit Planning and Team Huddles for CCM Patients

Start date: August 3, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a novel project which incorporates clinic and community pharmacists in three aspects of the Patient-Centered Medical Home: pre-visit planning, pre-visit care team huddles, and chronic care management (CCM). Patients for the project are enrolled in the NEIFPC CCM program and have Greenwood pharmacy as their primary pharmacy. Community and clinic pharmacists will contribute to pre-visit medication reviews and document their drug therapy recommendations in a shared, templated note in the clinic EHR. NEIFPC pharmacists will attend pre-visit team huddles to relay drug therapy recommendations to the physician. Revenue from CCM services will be prorated and shared between Greenwood pharmacy and NEIFPC. The project will last 9 months. Primary aims are to describe the pharmacist pre-visit planning service, summarize the billing experience of a community pharmacist providing this service, and to describe the drug therapy interventions made by pharmacists.