13 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
The main purpose of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness, of the ACCELERATE model of care to achieve HIV viral suppression at Week 24. The study will also assess the acceptability, appropriateness, feasibility, and sustainability of the ACCELERATE model of care. The ACCELERATE model combines a standardized method for outreach, the use of telehealth for rapid access to an HIV care provider, a simplified pre-approved HIV regimen, a free 30-day medication starter supply, and re-linkage to medical care.
Adolescents with Type 1 Diabetes (age 13-18 years, T1D duration \>6 months managed on insulin) and poor glycemic control will wear a blinded CGM to obtain baseline data. After assuring adherence to CGM wear, participants will receive a non-blinded CGM and will share their blood glucose levels with the study team. Clinical personnel will remotely monitor patients in real-time for 3 months and communicate regularly over secure text messaging with participants and their parents. Following active remote monitoring, the participants will wear a non-blinded CGM for 3 months. Primary outcome assessment will be the change in HbA1c after 3 months of real-time remote continuous glucose monitoring.
Psychotropic medications are a cornerstone of treatment for individuals with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, however rates of full or partial non-adherence can exceed 60%. Inadequate adherence is associated with poor outcomes such as relapse, homelessness, hospitalization, and increased health care costs. Studies have shown a direct correlation between non-adherence and rates of relapse in schizophrenia; on average, non-adherent patients have a risk of relapse that is 3.7 times greater than their adherent counterparts. A major obstacle to good outcomes in the maintenance treatment of patients with severe mental illness is difficulty with medication routines on an on-going basis. For this reason, long-acting injectable antipsychotic medication is a particularly attractive treatment option for populations with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, although it is unlikely that medication treatment alone is likely to modify long-term attitudes and behaviors. This prospective study is a pilot analysis of a combined approach which merges a psychosocial intervention to optimize treatment attitudes towards psychotropic medication (CAE) and long-acting injectable antipsychotic medication (L) in recently homeless individuals with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder who are known to have on-going difficulties with treatment non-adherence. It is expected that this combined approach (CAE-L) will improve illness outcomes among the most vulnerable of populations with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.
This is an open pilot trial of web-based parent training for tantrums and disruptive behavior in children. Parents will be asked to complete a battery of tests to assess their children' behaviors before and after the intervention. Children will undergo a psychiatric evaluation as part of screening. The intervention will be delivered online via an app over a period of 6 weeks. It consists of 8 self-guided courses that take approximately 10 minutes to complete and include text and animated parent-child simulations. Parents will also complete 3 one-hour videoconferencing sessions with a study clinician. During the intervention, parents will be taught various strategies for managing situations that can be anger provoking for their child. This study is conducted to examine whether a digitally-delivered version of parent-management training can be used to reduce behavioral problems including anger outbursts, irritability, aggression and noncompliance.
The goal of this study is to test a multi-faceted Tailored Motivational Interviewing Implementation intervention (TMI), based on the Dynamic Adaptation Process (DAP) to scale up an Evidence-based Practice (EBP) in multidisciplinary adolescent HIV care settings while balancing flexibility and fidelity. A mixed-methods design will be used, in which the dominant method is quantitative (a dynamic wait-listed design; DWLD) to determine the impact of TMI on the integration of MI with fidelity in 10 adolescent HIV clinics with an average of 15 providers and 100 patients each.
This study is a modular intervention that is intended to improve treatment adherence among individuals with bipolar disorder on atypical antipsychotic therapy who have been identified as having treatment adherence problems.
In this study, patients with bipolar disorder who do not take their medications as prescribed will receive specialized education and therapy treatment to determine whether the specialized treatment is effective in helping patients to take their medications consistently.
This study will attempt to increase understanding of why bipolar disorder patients do or do not take their medications by conducting in-depth interviews with them.
This study investigates group medical visits as a quality improvement strategy for hypertension. It studies group visits in which patients see their own primary care provider together with other patients who have hypertension. The group visits are intended to enhance the patient's self-efficacy for self-management of their chronic disease (hypertension).
The study aims to compare the efficacy of Nasal High Flow Therapy (NHF) with low-flow oxygen supplementation in improving postoperative intermittent desaturations. If so, this mode of therapy would provide a cost effective, relatively easy to implement, and better tolerated treatment to Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) for oxygen stabilization.
This is a randomized controlled intervention trial in poorly compliant patients, testing whether improved compliance behavior decreases rates of acute rejection risk and graft loss. Hypothesis: A study of an intensive intervention focused on the least compliant patients and beginning 3 months post-transplant. Effective intervention will reduce the number of acute rejection episodes and thus the occurrence of chronic rejection and graft loss.
Hypertension is the leading risk factor for cardiovascular disease, global mortality, and ranks third among the causes of disability. Treatment of hypertension is relatively straightforward, but patient adherence to long-term self-care strategies is problematically low. Three important behaviors that individuals can adhere to in order to help lower their BP are 1) Taking medications as prescribed by a physician, 2) Monitoring BP at home, and 3) Limiting dietary sodium intake. Adherence to these behaviors is problematic and currently ranges from 25% to 50%; the present Phase I STTR study is aimed at addressing the behavioral barriers for adherence to these three activities with the help of mobile technology. In particular, this STTR will develop and test an incentive program delivered through a mobile health app to increase adherence to prescribed BP control regimens and precipitate reduction in BP.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether cognitive rehabilitation or psychoeducation impacts medication adherence in HIV-1 seropositive individuals.