search
Back to results

Telehealth-enabled Integrated Palliative Care for People With Dementia (IBC)

Primary Purpose

Dementia of Alzheimer Type, Alzheimer Disease, Frontotemporal Degeneration

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
United States
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Telehealth Integrated Primary Care (TIPC)
Sponsored by
Thomas Jefferson University
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional supportive care trial for Dementia of Alzheimer Type

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Over 18
  • Individuals diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease, Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias, (including frontotemporal degeneration, Lewy body dementia, vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia, or mixed etiology dementias), or patients billed for cognitive impairment in the last three years that have a Jefferson PCP
  • Individuals with access to a smart phone, computer, or some other telehealth-capable technology
  • English-speaking individuals

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Traumatic Brain Injuries
  • Incarceration
  • Homelessness
  • Active use of antipsychotic medications
  • Pregnancy

Sites / Locations

  • Thomas Jefferson UniversityRecruiting

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

No Intervention

Arm Label

Intervention

Control

Arm Description

Individuals in the intervention group will undergo a series of two telehealth video visits and a series of survey assessments at baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months.

Individuals in the control group will continue with their usual standard of care and undergo a series of survey assessments at baseline, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Change in Goal Attainment
Participants identify their own primary goals related to their care using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) system, and report the degree to which each goal was met. Patients will set 2 concrete care goals and report if they feel like they met these goals much less than expected, less than expected, as expected, more than expected, or much more than expected.
Change in Goal Attainment
Participants identify their own primary goals related to their care using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) system, and report the degree to which each goal was met. Patients will set 2 concrete care goals and report if they feel like they met these goals much less than expected, less than expected, as expected, more than expected, or much more than expected.
Change in Goal Attainment
Participants identify their own primary goals related to their care using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) system, and report the degree to which each goal was met. Patients will set 2 concrete care goals and report if they feel like they met these goals much less than expected, less than expected, as expected, more than expected, or much more than expected.
Change in Goal Attainment
Participants identify their own primary goals related to their care using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) system, and report the degree to which each goal was met. Patients will set 2 concrete care goals and report if they feel like they met these goals much less than expected, less than expected, as expected, more than expected, or much more than expected.
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Patients can score up to 52 points with a higher score being associated with a higher quality of life.
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Patients can score up to 52 points with a higher score being associated with a higher quality of life.
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Patients can score up to 52 points with a higher score being associated with a higher quality of life.
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Patients can score up to 52 points with a higher score being associated with a higher quality of life.
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Participants can score up to 52 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher quality of life.
Change in Decision-Making
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Change in Decision-Making
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Change in Decision-Making
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Change in Decision-Making
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Change in Decision-Making
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Feasibility, Acceptability, and Satisfaction regarding TIPC Intervention
Participants in the intervention group will report their experience with the TIPC model via survey questions. Participants will indicate whether or not they strongly disagree, disagree, have no opinion, agree, or strongly agree with a series of statements asking them about their experience with TIPC intervention.

Full Information

First Posted
August 29, 2022
Last Updated
September 6, 2022
Sponsor
Thomas Jefferson University
Collaborators
Independence Blue Cross
search

1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT05524181
Brief Title
Telehealth-enabled Integrated Palliative Care for People With Dementia
Acronym
IBC
Official Title
Telehealth-enabled Integrated Palliative Care for People With Dementia
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
September 2022
Overall Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Study Start Date
June 29, 2022 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
June 2023 (Anticipated)
Study Completion Date
April 2024 (Anticipated)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
Thomas Jefferson University
Collaborators
Independence Blue Cross

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
In prior work, this team developed a telehealth primary care model (TIPC), designed in close partnership with patients and clinicians to address a widespread increase in telehealth use during the COVID-19 pandemic. This research team will test the TIPC intervention to assess support for patients among a population of persons with dementia (PwD) over the course of 24 months. This study's aims are 1) to explore the impact of the TIPC intervention on patient-important outcomes, engagement with community-based support provided through insurers, advanced care planning (primarily identification of health-care proxy), and patterns of hospice and healthcare utilization in the target population and 2) to evaluate patient, caregiver, and clinical team perspectives of feasibility and acceptability of a TIPC model, and apply findings from this work to the development of a larger randomized control trial designed to assess long-term efficacy of TIPC intervention.
Detailed Description
One in 3 deaths for those over the age of 65 are caused by Alzheimer's or related dementia. Lack of goals-of-care conversations with these patients drives up end-of-life healthcare costs due to excessive use of medical procedures and places unnecessary decision-making burden on caregivers. Such realities exhibit how existing models of specialty palliative care are suffering too great of a workforce shortage to adequately meet the needs of increasing numbers of PwD and are also inaccessible to underrepresented minorities (URMs) due to cost. Implementing a TIPC model could improve these outcomes through intersectional engagement of relevant health entities to carve more concrete care goals and drive down overall care cost. This trial will enroll 50 patients from Jefferson (and possibly their caregivers, if they have one). Half of the patient participants will be given the TIPC intervention and all participants will be assessed over 12 months to assess changes in patient-important outcomes. For both groups, the researchers will evaluate goal attainment, quality of life, decision making, caregiver support/burden, and clinician/payor satisfaction. Assessments will be ongoing throughout the year (baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months) to fully illustrate what kind of sustained impact or change in trajectory this brief intervention may have, and if other gaps are later identified. Patient participants will be recruited from Jefferson through an EMR report generating potentially eligible patient names and contact information. Patient participants will be randomly assigned to study groups (25 intervention, 25 control). If a patient is randomized to the intervention group, researchers will ask if they have a caregiver so that they may be enrolled in the study as well. Intervention subjects will partake in two telehealth visits as a part of the TIPC model. The first telehealth visit will focus on ACP and identifying patient-important outcomes via a web-based tool for discussion with a palliative care (PC) specialist. The second telehealth visit will involve patient communication of their patient important outcomes (PIOs) to a primary care provider (PCP) and the translation of those PIOs into care plans for ongoing management. Control subjects will be followed as they continue with their usual standard of care. They will also complete all measures at pre-specified time points and researchers will assess for changes in GAS, provider burden and decision making as well as hospitalizations, hospice, palliative care plans. All patient/caregiver dyads assigned to the intervention group will be interviewed remotely after the intervention via survey to assess their goal attainment, satisfaction with care and connectivity to community resources. Evaluation of patient outcomes of the TIPC model will be ongoing and through an assets/strengths-based framework. At baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months, patient quality of life, decision-making, and caregiver support/burden will be measured through a series of follow-up assessments. At 3, 6, 9, and 12 months, the degree to which intervention subjects felt each of their PIOs was met will be self-reported by the patient/caregiver. Patient satisfaction will also be self-reported by intervention subjects 1 month post-telehealth visit 2 in a short interview to determine how well the intervention targeted health inequities amongst AA/URM populations. To substantiate intervention impact on patients, both clinical and implementation outcomes (payor engagement, changes in level of care, recurrent hospitalizations, transition to hospice, intervention uptake, PCP satisfaction) will be measured and evaluated 6+ months post-intervention via retrospective data review. This is with the exception of PCP satisfaction which is to be self-reported following the same acceptability measures as the intervention subjects.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Dementia of Alzheimer Type, Alzheimer Disease, Frontotemporal Degeneration, Lewy Body Dementia, Vascular Cognitive Impairment, Vascular Dementia, Mixed Dementia

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Supportive Care
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Model Description
The first 25 participants/participant dyads will be assigned to the TIPC intervention group. The next 25 participants/participant dyads will be assigned to the control group.
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Non-Randomized
Enrollment
50 (Anticipated)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Intervention
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Individuals in the intervention group will undergo a series of two telehealth video visits and a series of survey assessments at baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months.
Arm Title
Control
Arm Type
No Intervention
Arm Description
Individuals in the control group will continue with their usual standard of care and undergo a series of survey assessments at baseline, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months.
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
Telehealth Integrated Primary Care (TIPC)
Other Intervention Name(s)
TIPC
Intervention Description
The TIPC model of intervention incorporates video visits across research clinicians and patients' existing care clinicians for more synergized and accessible care provision for a given clinical indication. The first TIPC visit will center around the patient setting care goals for themselves and their caregiver with the help of a palliative care physician. The second TIPC visit will focus on assessing goal attainment and also close the care loop between their existing care team, a research-appointed palliative care team, and their involvement in the study.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Change in Goal Attainment
Description
Participants identify their own primary goals related to their care using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) system, and report the degree to which each goal was met. Patients will set 2 concrete care goals and report if they feel like they met these goals much less than expected, less than expected, as expected, more than expected, or much more than expected.
Time Frame
3 months
Title
Change in Goal Attainment
Description
Participants identify their own primary goals related to their care using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) system, and report the degree to which each goal was met. Patients will set 2 concrete care goals and report if they feel like they met these goals much less than expected, less than expected, as expected, more than expected, or much more than expected.
Time Frame
6 months
Title
Change in Goal Attainment
Description
Participants identify their own primary goals related to their care using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) system, and report the degree to which each goal was met. Patients will set 2 concrete care goals and report if they feel like they met these goals much less than expected, less than expected, as expected, more than expected, or much more than expected.
Time Frame
9 months
Title
Change in Goal Attainment
Description
Participants identify their own primary goals related to their care using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) system, and report the degree to which each goal was met. Patients will set 2 concrete care goals and report if they feel like they met these goals much less than expected, less than expected, as expected, more than expected, or much more than expected.
Time Frame
12 months
Title
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Description
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Patients can score up to 52 points with a higher score being associated with a higher quality of life.
Time Frame
Baseline
Title
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Description
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Patients can score up to 52 points with a higher score being associated with a higher quality of life.
Time Frame
3 months
Title
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Description
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Patients can score up to 52 points with a higher score being associated with a higher quality of life.
Time Frame
6 months
Title
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Description
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Patients can score up to 52 points with a higher score being associated with a higher quality of life.
Time Frame
9 months
Title
Change in Disease-Related Quality of Life
Description
Participants report their overall quality of life by utilizing the Quality of Life in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (QoL-AD). These metrics include but are not limited to: physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, self as a whole, ability to do chores, ability to do things for fun, money and life as a whole. A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (poor=1, fair=2, good=3, excellent=4). Participants can score up to 52 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher quality of life.
Time Frame
12 months
Title
Change in Decision-Making
Description
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Time Frame
Baseline
Title
Change in Decision-Making
Description
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Time Frame
3 months
Title
Change in Decision-Making
Description
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Time Frame
6 months
Title
Change in Decision-Making
Description
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Time Frame
9 months
Title
Change in Decision-Making
Description
Participants assess the extent to which they are involved in everyday decision making (e.g., when to get up, what foods to buy) the Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (not at all involved=0, a little involved=1, fairly involved=2, very involved=3). Participants can score up to 45 points with a higher score being positively associated with a higher level of decision involvement.
Time Frame
12 months
Title
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Description
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Time Frame
Baseline
Title
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Description
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Time Frame
3 months
Title
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Description
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Time Frame
6 months
Title
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Description
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Time Frame
9 months
Title
Change in Caregiver Support/Burden
Description
Caregivers of participants explore the personal and role strain that they experience via the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI22). A summary index score is derived by applying an appropriate value set to the responses for each question (never=1, rarely=2, sometimes=3, quite frequently=4, nearly always=5). Participants can score up to 88 points with a higher score being negatively associated with a higher level of burden experienced by the caregiver.
Time Frame
12 months
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Feasibility, Acceptability, and Satisfaction regarding TIPC Intervention
Description
Participants in the intervention group will report their experience with the TIPC model via survey questions. Participants will indicate whether or not they strongly disagree, disagree, have no opinion, agree, or strongly agree with a series of statements asking them about their experience with TIPC intervention.
Time Frame
3 months

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Over 18 Individuals diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease, Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias, (including frontotemporal degeneration, Lewy body dementia, vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia, or mixed etiology dementias), or patients billed for cognitive impairment in the last three years that have a Jefferson PCP Individuals with access to a smart phone, computer, or some other telehealth-capable technology English-speaking individuals Exclusion Criteria: Traumatic Brain Injuries Incarceration Homelessness Active use of antipsychotic medications Pregnancy
Central Contact Person:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Brooke Worster, MD
Phone
215-955-1888
Email
Brooke.Worster@jefferson.edu
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Samantha Starkey, MPH
Phone
609-289-5678
Email
Samantha.Starkey@jefferson.edu
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Thomas Jefferson University
City
Philadelphia
State/Province
Pennsylvania
ZIP/Postal Code
19107
Country
United States
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Samantha Starkey, MPH
Phone
609-289-5678
Email
Samantha.Starkey@jefferson.edu
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Brooke Worster, MD
Phone
610-442-6913
Email
Brooke.Worster@jefferson.edu

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Learn more about this trial

Telehealth-enabled Integrated Palliative Care for People With Dementia

We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs