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Palliative Care clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05300126 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

Brief Hypnosis Intervention for Palliative Care Patients and Their Relatives.

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

The study objective is to assess the feasibility of hypnosis sessions for palliative care patients in home care and of their relatives. The intervention consists of four 15-minute hypnosis sessions for the patients and for one family member, taking place at the patient's home. Recordings will be given to practice self-hypnosis.

NCT ID: NCT05273580 Completed - Cancer Clinical Trials

Wearable and Patient-reported Outcome-based Continuous Assessment and Support Alerts in Palliative Care

wePRO-CASA
Start date: April 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Non-professional carers (typically family members) play a critical role in providing adequate home care. This research explores the use of wearable sensors (WS) and electronic patient-reported outcome (ePRO) surveys to monitor stress levels of advanced cancer patient/carer dyads. During wear times, WS-triggered ecological momentary assessments (EMAs) were conducted via short smartphone-based surveys. This pilot study investigates the feasibility of EMAs in community palliative care.

NCT ID: NCT05270915 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

End of Life Care in Neonatal Intensive Unite

Start date: May 6, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In China, neonatal death on 2019 was 3.5 per 1000 live births, which counts around 57,000 deaths. In mainland China, parents are mostly the main decision-makers in withdrawing life-sustaining treatments in infants and neonatologists often follow the wishes of the parents. However, there is limited experience in supporting parents after the decision is made to withdraw treatment. The aim of this study was to develop and test a family supportive end-of-life care intervention to decrease parental depression and increase parent satisfaction. Investigators indicated that providing a comfortable environment and supportive care to parents during the final days of life of an infant decrease their depression and increases parent satisfaction. The NICUs in mainland China and beyond might consider involving parents in end-of-life care by providing a single room, have a dedicated psychologist available and provide supportive commemoration materials.

NCT ID: NCT05244590 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

Primary Care Consultation for Patients With Palliative Care Needs

Start date: April 27, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Introduction General practitioners provide health care in the community, managing patients and families longitudinally, and there is some evidence that when they are involved in caring for people with palliative care needs alongside specialists, palliative care delivery may be more efficient. The investigators aim to determine the impact of a mix-method intervention involving training in PC and a new consultation model for patients with palliative care needs in primary care. Methods and analysis A before-after study will be conducted in the centre health care region of Portugal. The study will involve 53 patients with palliative care needs from the list of patients of the GPs who accept to collaborate with the project. The mix-method intervention will consist of: (1) training in palliative care and (2) application of a newly developed consultation model for use in the primary care setting and consisting of medical consultation every 3 weeks for a period of 12 weeks. The primary outcome is physical symptom burden, evaluated by the Integrated Palliative Outcome Scale (IPOS) patient version. Secondary outcomes include psychological symptoms, and communication/practical issues (IPOS); number of consultations for acute disease both in the health care unit and emergency department, number of hospitalizations and referrals to hospital health care services.

NCT ID: NCT05168514 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

The Effect of Back Massage on Palliative Care Patients on Sleep Quality and Pain

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

This study was planned to evaluate the effect of back massage applied to palliative care patients on sleep quality and pain.

NCT ID: NCT05120154 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

Building CAPACITI for Community-Based Palliative Care

CAPACITI
Start date: November 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this cluster randomized controlled trial is to assess the efficacy of a quality improvement intervention called CAPACITI intended to increase competency among primary care teams to deliver early palliative care. CAPACITI is palliative care training and coaching program for primary care teams, comprised of three, two-month (4 session) modules, each addressing a critical component of implementing a palliative care approach into primary care practice.

NCT ID: NCT05085873 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

Sodium Oxybate Versus Midazolam for Comfort Sedation

ONAMI
Start date: October 14, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The study aims at deepen the proof level of sodium oxybate use for comfort sedation at the end of life in a palliative care unit by comparing it to midazolam in a prospective randomized study with blinded efficacy evaluation. The study will be carried out for a period of 24 months with a recruitment objective of 22 patients with refractory suffering and with a short-term prognosis.

NCT ID: NCT05082389 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

Prediction of Hospital Readmissions in SAPV (Specialised Home Palliative Care) Patients

PRePP
Start date: April 12, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Specialised outpatient palliative care (German: Spezialisierte ambulante Palliativversorgung, abbreviation: SAPV) aims to support incurably ill or dying people spending their last lifetime at home. Furthermore, a major goal is to prevent unnecessary hospital admissions. However, they occasionally occur for various reasons. This project aims to explore predictors of readmission in terms of structural factors as well as family caregivers' psychological distress. Study Aims 1. Identification of structural predictors and caregiver reported predictors for hospital readmissions. 2. Identification of psychological liabilities of nursing relatives. 3. Developing a concept to support nursing relatives.

NCT ID: NCT05001620 Completed - Dementia Clinical Trials

Implementation of a Telehealth Palliative Care Model for Persons With Dementia

IMPACT
Start date: August 4, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Grounded in the Reach-Effectiveness-Adoption-Implementation-Maintenance (RE-AIM) Model, this study will assess the implementation outcomes of the Nurse Practitioner (NP) delivered telehealth Palliative Care Consultation in Post-Acute Care (PCC-PAC) intervention for persons living with dementia (PLWD) and their care-partners newly admitted to nursing homes (NHs) for post-acute care.

NCT ID: NCT04894162 Completed - Palliative Care Clinical Trials

Participating in Palliative Care Research

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

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.