Treatment Trials

92 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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RECRUITING
Video Training Supplementation for Patients Discharged on Home Parental Nutrition
Description

The goal of this clinical trial is to develop an educational video addressing the aseptic techniques to safely handle central catheters for administrating parenteral nutrition at home.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Follow-up of MTBI Patients Discharged from the ED Using Standard Clinical Triage Including BrainScope One
Description

The purpose of the study is to validate the clinical outcome in patients with closed head injuries (GCS 14-15, ages 18-85) who are being evaluated for head trauma, integrating the BrainScope One structural injury classifier (SIC) algorithm, with focus on SIC negative classification. In addition, to assess functional impairment (concussion) in these patients, results from Brain Function Index (BFI) or Concussion Index (CI) algorithms will be used for analysis.

COMPLETED
Improving Hospital-to-Home Care Transitions for High-risk Younger Adult Patients
Description

Improving hospital-to-home care transitions can produce improvements in patient safety and health care outcomes, while decreasing medical costs. Most transitions research has examined strategies for older patients. This project, however, focuses on younger, high-risk patients within a safety net system. The proposed intervention is based on research that patient activation, as measured by the Patient Activation Measure (PAM), is correlated with risk for hospital readmission. The intervention seeks to increase PAM scores by employing a Transition Coach to coach patients, prior to and for 30-days after discharge, to (1) improve self-management skills through goal setting and goal attainment; (2) to enhance patient capacity to engage in trusting relationships with the Primary Care Provider (PCP), other medical specialists, family members of friends, and the Transition Coach; and (3) to improve ability to navigate the medical system. The investigators will conduct a randomized trial to determine; (a) if PAM scores can be increased in the 30-day after hospital discharge; (b) if increased PAM scores, in this setting, are correlated with changes in healthcare utilization patterns; and (c) if the intervention presents a viable strategy to change healthcare utilization patterns and reduce rehospitalizations.

COMPLETED
READI (Readiness Evaluation And Discharge Interventions) Study
Description

Preparation of patients for discharge is a primary function of hospital-based nursing care and readiness for discharge is an important outcome of hospital care. Inadequacies in discharge preparation have been well-documented and linked to difficulty with self-management after hospital discharge and with increased likelihood of emergency department (ED) use and readmission. Prior studies by the research team have led to recommendations for implementation of discharge readiness assessment as a standard nursing practice for hospital discharge. The investigators will conduct a multi-site study to determine the impact on post-discharge utilization (readmission and ED visits) and costs of implementing discharge readiness assessment as a standard nursing practice for adult medical-surgical patients discharged to home. The study tests, in a stepped approach, the impact of implementing discharge readiness assessment by the discharging nurse as standard nursing practice (RN-RHDS protocol), the incremental value of informing the nurse assessment with the patient's perspective (RN-RHDS+PT-RHDS protocol), and of requiring that the nurse initiates and documents risk-mitigating actions for patients with low readiness scores (RN-RHDS+PT-RHDS+NIAF protocol). HYPOTHESIS 1: Patients discharged using the RN-RHDS protocol will have fewer hospital readmissions and ED visits within 30 days post-discharge compared to patients discharged under usual care conditions. HYPOTHESIS 2: Patients discharged using the RN-RHDS+PT-RHDS protocol will have fewer hospital readmissions and ED visits within 30 days post-discharge compared to patients discharged using the RN-RHDS protocol. HYPOTHESIS 3: Patients discharged by nurses using the RN-RHDS+PT-RHDS protocol plus a Nurse-Initiated Action Form \[NIAF\] (RN-RHDS+PT-RHDS+NIAF protocol) will have fewer post-discharge readmissions and ED visits than patients discharged using the RN-RHDS+PT-RHDS protocol; the effect will be strongest for patients with low RHDS scores. Aim 4: Conduct cost-benefit analysis of implementing discharge readiness assessment as standard practice, by comparing cost-savings from reduced post-discharge utilization against implementation costs.

COMPLETED
Evaluating a New Way to Prepare Parents of Hospitalized Children for Discharge and Management of Child at Home
Description

The purpose of this study is to pilot test the 'Family Self- Management Discharge Preparation Intervention \[FSM-DPI\]' that focuses on content and delivery methods to support an effective family transition to home self-management after a child's hospitalization.

COMPLETED
Discharge Planning for Elderly Patients in the Emergency Department: Use of a Brief Phone Call After Discharge to Improve Medication Utilization and Physician Follow-up
Description

The investigators hypothesize that the acquisition and correct utilization of medications as well as arranging and attending follow-up appointments will improve as a result of a phone call intervention 1-3 days after elderly patients are discharged from the emergency department (ED).

COMPLETED
The Impact of Just-in-time Information on Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) Discharges
Description

We, the investigators, will provide "Just-in-Time" information, physician educational material, to primary care pediatricians of Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) graduates at the time of NICU discharge. We will follow the rate of adverse events (deaths, re-hospitalizations, emergency room visits, and missed appointments) for 6 months after NICU discharge. We will assess levels of physician comfort in caring for NICU specific diseases, as well as physician satisfaction with the discharge process. We hypothesize that the provision of "Just-in-Time" information will decrease the rate of adverse events, and make physicians more comfortable in caring for complicated NICU graduates, and more satisfied with the discharge process.

WITHDRAWN
Remote Presence Timely Discharge Management
Description

The purpose of this study is to integrate Remote Presence technology in order to increase the number of timely patient discharges before 11 am from the medical center.

COMPLETED
Post-Acute Physician Home Visit Program
Description

New or worsening symptoms following discharge from the hospital likely leads to unplanned readmission. These rates are higher than desired and costly to patients, payers, and providers. Many interventions have unsuccessfully attempted to reduce readmissions, but few have provided in-home personnel to patients transitioning from acute care back to ambulatory care. Still fewer have involved a physician in the home. We therefore will test the effect of a physician home visit to a patient's home who was discharged in the last 4 days.

COMPLETED
Connect-Home Clinical Trial
Description

This study will test whether transitional care targeting care needs of seriously ill, skilled nursing facility (SNF) patients and their caregivers will help to improve SNF patient outcomes (preparedness for discharge, quality of life, function and acute care use) and caregiver outcomes (preparedness for the caregiving role. caregiver burden and caregiver distress).

TERMINATED
Effectiveness of a Diabetes Focused Discharge Order Set Among Poorly Controlled Hospitalized Patients Transitioning to Glargine U300 Insulin
Description

Diabetes is present in 25% of hospitalized patients; yet effective hospital discharge programs for patients with diabetes are understudied. In particular, patients who are initiating or intensifying insulin therapy have the most to benefit in terms of glycemic control. However, these patients are also particularly vulnerable to poor transitions of care for a variety of reasons, including the complexity of therapy, inadequate patient education, differences in patient and provider expectations, and insufficient resources. Disruption of insulin therapy following hospitalization is associated with higher HbA1c, shorter survival, and increased readmissions and medical costs. In a Society of Hospital Medicine Survey, only one fourth of hospitals were supported with written protocols to standardize medication, education, equipment, and follow-up instructions. However, discharge order sets have largely been limited to the inpatient setting and have not been utilized to guide insulin use at hospital discharge. This study will assess whether a nurse supported diabetes focused inpatient discharge order set (DOS) can improve post-discharge outcomes among hospitalized patients with poorly controlled insulin-requiring diabetes.

COMPLETED
Combined Social Worker and Pharmacist Transitional Care Program
Description

In an effort to improve care coordination and reduce hospital readmissions, Rush University Medical Center developed the Combined Social Worker and Pharmacist Program, which targets both the psychosocial and clinical risk factors that can lead to rehospitalization. This study will evaluate the impact of this program on 30-day same hospital readmission rates and total cost of care.

COMPLETED
Enhanced Discharge Planning Program -- Prospective
Description

The Enhanced Discharge Planning Program (EDPP) is an intervention designed to help older adults safely transition to the community after discharge. This is achieved through telephonic care coordination facilitated by social workers. EDPP social workers ensure full implementation of the discharge plan, assist with coordinating community resources and follow-up appointments, and intervene around other issues that may arise as a result of a complex transition. The EDPP intervention is currently being offered to some older adult patients discharged from Rush University Medical Center. Case managers refer older adult patients on selected units who they believe may be at risk for adverse events post-discharge. While this service is being provided to patients, it has not yet been formally evaluated. This randomized controlled trial will provide data necessary for a more rigorous evaluation of the efficacy of this intervention.

RECRUITING
Pilot Study of Hospital GamePlan4Care
Description

Hospital stays are stressful for the family and friends who care for adults with dementia. Following hospital discharge, adults with dementia often have increased care needs, which places new caregiving demands on their family and friends. Family and friends are critical to ensuring that Veterans with dementia can live safely in the community following discharge. Healthcare systems have an opportunity to support family and friends of adults with dementia by addressing dementia-specific caregiving challenges that arise during the transition from hospital to home. The investigators are comparing two different support programs for family and friends of hospitalized adults with dementia. The two programs are Hospital GamePlan4Care and Caregiver Education. Hospital GamePlan4Care was developed with feedback from people who care for Veterans with dementia. Hospital GamePlan4Care helps caregivers build skills to care for someone with dementia recently discharged from the hospital. It includes a written handbook, online training on the Hospital GamePlan4Care website, and phone calls with a dementia care specialist. The online training is tailored to the caregiver. The Caregiver Education program provides information that helps caregivers care for someone recently hospitalized. It includes a written handbook, recommendations for high-quality online resources, and phone calls with a dementia care specialist. Both programs will start when the adult with dementia is hospitalized. Each program lasts at least three months. To be eligible, the caregiver must care for a Veteran with dementia admitted to the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center in Houston, Texas. Caregivers interested in participating and passing eligibility screening will be enrolled in the study for at least three months. Each enrolled caregiver will have a 50% chance of being enrolled in the Hospital GamePlan4Care group or the Caregiver Education group (like flipping a coin). Both groups will be asked to complete several questionnaires about their needs as a caregiver and their well-being. Questionnaires will be completed at the beginning of the study and one and three months after the Veteran is discharged from the hospital. Each questionnaire should take 30-60 minutes to complete.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Critical Care Observation of Motor Activity (COMA) and SICU Outcomes
Description

In the surgical intensive care unit (SICU), goals of critical care are often discussed in long-term ventilated patients around the time of extubation. Muscle weakness predicts extubation failure but formal muscle strength assessment by the Medical Research Council scale is time-consuming and not part of the daily clinical exam. In this observational study, we hypothesize that COMA measurement, routinely used by the SICU nurses, is a reliable and valid predictor for patients' SICU outcomes. This prospective observational study is carried out within a consecutively enrolled cohort of adult patients who are extubated in two SICUs at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.

TERMINATED
An Electronic Multimedia Discharge Application
Description

The purpose of this study is to determine whether the addition of a mobile or web based multimedia discharge application (eDischarge) to the discharge process is effective in improving patient experience, engagement, and clinical outcomes in the early post discharge period.

COMPLETED
Impact of a Diabetes Transitions Tool Kit on Post-Hospitalization Glycemic Control
Description

The goal of this research is to evaluate the impact and feasibility of using web-based patient-provider communication and a remote glucose monitoring tool to improve post-hospitalization glycemic control and patient self-care. The investigators hypothesize that providing patients this web-based tool over a 4-week period after discharge to home will result in more effective glycemic control compared to usual care, and that patients with access to the "tool kit" will have a trend towards improved diabetes self-management and less diabetes-related distress.

COMPLETED
Using Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) to Create Patient-Friendly Discharge Summaries
Description

This will be an open-label, parallel-group, randomized trial. Patients will be randomized to review the patient-friendly discharge instructions at the time of discharge (intervention group) vs the standard of care. The intervention differs from the standard of care in that patients will be given additional medical documentation in the intervention group.

ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Improving In-hospital and Post-discharge Patient Education for Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Description

The purpose of this study is to develop and validate ways to provide better patient education and clinical management for individuals who go to the emergency department (ED) with concussion or mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI).

RECRUITING
Alerting Providers at Patient Hospital Discharge to Consider Prescribing Rivaroxaban to Reduce Venous Thromboembolism
Description

A new algorithm derived from only patient age and components of the complete blood count and basic metabolic panel can identify patients discharged from the hospital who may benefit from a blood thinner (called rivaroxaban) to decrease their risk of blood clots, and for whom the risk of bleeding is minimal. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the use of a pop-up alert, which will be seen by clinicians when a discharging patient has been identified as being someone for whom the risk of blood clots is high, but for whom bleeding risk is estimated to be low. The pop-up alert will be enabled in a sequential fashion for each group of hospitals in 1 month blocks. We will look to see if the pop-up alert changes the number of patients who receive rivaroxaban. We will also measure the outcomes of blood clots and bleeding among all discharging patients.

COMPLETED
A Study of Rivaroxaban (JNJ-39039039) on the Venous Thromboembolic Risk in Post-Hospital Discharge Patients
Description

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of rivaroxaban compared with placebo in the prevention of symptomatic venous thromboembolism (VTE) events and VTE-related death post-hospital discharge in high-risk, medically ill patients.

RECRUITING
Behavioral Activation Delivered Via Home-based Telehealth to Improve Functioning in Cardiovascular Disease Patients Recently Discharged From Inpatient Care
Description

The purpose of this study is to demonstrate whether Behavioral Activation for depression delivered via home based telehealth (BA-HT) is effective in improving social and role functioning in Veterans recently discharged from Cardiovascular disease (CVD-related) inpatient care. Eligible participants will receive either (1) twelve sessions of BA-HT or (2) standard best practices post CVD hospitalization care. Study participants will be 132 Veterans discharged from the Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center inpatient care facilities with CVD diagnoses corresponding to ICD 10 codes I20-I25 (120 unstable angina, stable angina; 121 NSTEMI, STEMI, initial encounter; 122 NSTEMI, STEMI, subsequent encounter; 124 acute coronary syndrome; 125 coronary arteriosclerosis with angina). They will be male or female, age 21 and above, and with approximately 40-50% minority representation. There will be assessment at baseline, 1 week post treatment, as well as 3 and 9-months post treatment. The investigators predict that BA-HT will more effectively increase social role and activity functioning, activity, mood and reduce 9-month re-hospitalization compared to current best-practices post-discharge care among patients scoring at least moderately depressed on the PROMIS Depression scale one week following hospital discharge for a CVD event.

COMPLETED
Insulin Degludec and Glargine U100 for Management of Hospitalized and Discharged Patients With Type 2 Diabetes
Description

The purpose of this study is to find out if treatment with degludec insulin when compared to glargine U100 insulin will result in similar blood sugar control in patients with diabetes who are admitted to the hospital and then transition to home after discharge from the hospital.

Conditions
RECRUITING
Accelerated Recovery After MIS Hepatectomy (ARAMIS Hep) to Support Early Discharge for Patients Undergoing Minimally Invasive Liver Resection
Description

To learn if an accelerated recovery program can shorten the length of hospital stay in patients having minimally invasive liver surgery.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Mobile-health Approach to Gather Clinical Information From Patients Following Hospital Discharge
Description

The purpose of this study is to assess the feasibility of using a mobile-health approach to gather clinical data from patients following discharge from the hospital on outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy (OPAT). The study population will consist of adult participants who have a smartphone that is capable of both text messaging and pairing with a Bluetooth thermometer that will be provided. Following discharge, patients will be asked to respond to two daily text messages. They will also be reminded to take and send in photos of any skin rashes that may develop as well as their PICC-line site during dressing changes. Text messages will be sent for up to 30 days, but will be stopped sooner if the patient is readmitted to the hospital or if OPAT is discontinued. At the end of the 30 days, all patients will be sent a text message survey about usability, the time it took to complete the study tasks, suggestions for future improvements, and whether they would be willing to be interviewed via phone. A subset of the participants will be interviewed via phone to obtain more detailed feasibility data. Information from the patient's medical record will be collected at the time of hospital discharge as well as at the end of the study period. Additionally, a focus group (via conference call) will be conducted with all research team members and infectious disease physicians involved in OPAT who did not use the system to gauge their needs and to get ideas for future applications of our tools.

COMPLETED
Checklist Tool in Engaging Patients in the Discharge Planning Process
Description

This clinical trial studies how well a checklist tool works in engaging patients in the discharge planning process. Engaging patients in the discharge process may increase participation in the discharge process and improve discharge outcomes, understanding of care after hospitalization, and decrease complications.

TERMINATED
Diagnostic Utility of MRI in Female Patients With Nipple Discharge: A Prospective Trial
Description

The purpose of the proposed prospective study is to determine the diagnostic value of MRI for the evaluation of patients with pathologic nipple discharge. Breast surgeons will identify clinic patients with pathologic nipple discharge (unilateral and bloody or unilateral and clear) and refer them for breast MRI. When the clinical team notifies the study team that an MRI has been ordered for that purpose, the study team will consent patients to document the results and follow-up. The study team will not be obtaining MRI's on patients for research purposes only. The following data will be collected and analyzed: patient age, characteristics of the discharge (laterality, spontaneous versus expressed, duration of time, color, presence of blood), imaging workup and findings, BI-RADS final assessment categories, pathology results from core biopsy and/or surgical excision, and clinical and radiologic follow-up data during the two years after presentation. Participation in this study poses minimal risk to patients. Risks to the subjects include loss of confidentiality and unnecessary breast biopsy. The risks associated with MRI are minimal; however, since a gadolinium-based contrast agent will be administered for the MRI, patients with compromised renal function and patients who are pregnant will be excluded from the study.

ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Giving Resources to LOw-income Children to Enhance RecoverY
Description

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if an intervention to provide food support to families who are part of a Medicaid Accountable Care Organization will provide benefits. The main question it aims to answer: Does this monthly food support intervention reduce food insecurity and healthcare utilization in these patients. Participants will complete surveys in the hospital, 14-days after discharge, and then quarterly for up to 18 months. Families randomized to the intervention group will receive monthly grocery gift cards for one year.

ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Effectiveness of mHealth Post-discharge Intervention for Patients With Severe Mental Illness
Description

The overall aim of this program of research is to improve the continuity of care for patients with serious mental illness (SMI) by supporting a safer and more efficient bridge from hospital to outpatient care using a mobile device-delivered app called Transition-FOCUS (tFOCUS), which has previously been tested in community samples. The purpose of the proposed project is to establish the effectiveness of our empirically-supported, multi-component mHealth intervention.

UNKNOWN
Are Adductor Canal Blocks With Bupivacaine and Added Magnesium Better at Managing Post-operative Pain Than Bupivacaine and Added Buprenorphine in Patients Undergoing Same-day Discharge Total Knee Arthroplasty?
Description

The purpose of this study is to compare the use of magnesium and bupivacaine to buprenorphine and bupivacaine in post-operative adductor canal blocks (ACB); the study will determine if one combination can result in decreased opioid consumption and improved pain management for patients after same-day discharge total knee arthroplasty (TKA) . The investigators will assess whether the addition of magnesium to bupivacaine will decrease visual analog scale (VAS) pain scores, decrease post-operative total opioid consumption (oral morphine equivalents), decrease the incidence of post-operative nausea and vomiting (PONV), and improve patient satisfaction in comparison to when buprenorphine is added to bupivacaine.