The Mental Health Experiences of Sexual and Gender Minorities Living With Cancer and Their Care...
DepressionAnxiety3 moreThe purpose of this study is to examine relationships between contextual stressors and stress moderators, depression symptom experience, resilience, frailty, and quality of life among older sexual gender minorities cancer survivors and their care partners.
ElderTree Via a Voice Activated Device for Managing Chronic Health Conditions (NHLBI)
Chronic ConditionsMultipleMultiple chronic conditions (MCCs) are costly and pervasive among older adults. MCCs account for 90% of Medicare spending, and 65% of Medicare beneficiaries have 3 or more chronic conditions; 23% have 5 or more. MCCs are often addressed in primary care, where time pressures force a focus on medication and lab results rather than self-management skills. Patients often struggle with treatment adherence and the emotional and physical burdens of self-management and health tracking. Chronic conditions reduce quality of life (QOL) and increase loneliness, which exacerbate those conditions. The primary purpose of this study is to investigate whether a voice-based platform is better for delivering an electronic health intervention to older adults than a text/typing-based platform. We have an evidence-based electronic health intervention (Elder Tree, ET) that has been shown to improve quality of life, physical and socio-emotional health outcomes for older adults with multiple chronic conditions when delivered via a text/typing-based system. The current project would test whether such patients would benefit even more if ET were delivered via a voice-based system (vs. the text-based system) because they would use it more consistently. ET is an existing intervention providing tools, motivation, and support on a computer platform to help older adults manage their health.
A Long-term Study to Describe the Use of PASCORBIN® 7.5 g in Patients With Vitamin C Deficiency...
Vitamin C DeficiencyAcute Disease1 moreThe aim of this long-term observational study is the documentation of the use of PASCORBIN® 7.5 g in patients with vitamin C deficiency. Regarding the vitamin C deficiency, the investigators focus on the acquisition of data of the underlying diseases and the reduction of symptoms, that are related to oxidative stress and vitamin-C-deficiency. Next to this, exact assessment of medical tolerance and details of treatment requirements are further aims. Here the investigators take into account acute and chronic underlying medical conditions. Further health economic data are collected.
A Study of Patients With Chronic Disease
AsthmaChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease4 moreTARGET-RWE is a 10-year, international, longitudinal, observational study of patients with chronic disease designed to specifically address important clinical questions that remain incompletely answered from registration trials. The protocol will follow a master protocol design in which a shared study infrastructure supports progressive development of the registry across the spectrum of chronic diseases.
Unidos: Linking Individuals to Social Determinant and Community Health Services
Chronic DiseaseCommunity Health WorkersFor 19 years, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded Arizona Prevention Research Center (AzPRC) has been engaged in academic community collaborative research to reduce chronic disease health disparities among the Latino border communities in Arizona. Our research project, Unidos: Linking Individuals' to Social Determinant and Community Health Services, will result in a model Community-Clinical Linkage intervention to reduce chronic disease risk among Latinos in Arizona. Further, the investigators expect this intervention model to be applicable in other regions and populations. To execute this research, the AzPRC will implement the intervention in partnership with county health departments and Federally Qualified Health Centers. In Unidos the county/community-based CHWs will: 1) support and connect participants to health promotion resources; 2) provide individual and group-based support guided by a novel framework for understanding Latino's health advantages, the sociocultural resiliency model; and, 3) leverage community resources to help individuals address SDH-related needs.
Perceptions of LARC Among AYA With Chronic Illness
Chronic ConditionsMultipleThe investigators aim to perform a qualitative study exploring attitudes and perceived barriers to Long Acting Reversible Contraception (LARC), both implants and IUDs, among adolescent and young adults (AYA) with chronic illness at CHLA. While the literature examining barriers to LARC uptake is growing, its focus has been on older women and women who are not living with chronic illness. There remains a significant gap in the understanding of: What adolescents and young adults from ethnically diverse, economically underserved communities know about LARCs If and how LARCs fit into their considerations and decision making about contraception choices Perceived barriers to LARC among AYA with chronic medical conditions Information, perceptions, experiences that inform choices that may be unique to AYA living with chronic conditions Research Objectives Explore the impact of the experience of living with chronic medical conditions on AYA patient attitudes toward and acceptance of LARCs Identify AYA patient concerns and perceptions related to historical coercion and reproductive injustice experienced by minority communities that may reduce acceptance of LARC Explore the relationship between patients' perception of pediatric subspecialty care providers' attitudes regarding sexual health and contraception guidance and patients' attitudes toward and acceptance of LARC Identify factors related to patient's age, family's values, and medical condition, as well as historical events or legacies that may impact preference of implant vs intra-uterine device (IUD), independent of safety/medical contraindications, if choosing a LARC method. Explore other social, cultural or psychological factors that influence perception and represent barriers to LARC access Hypotheses The impact of chronic illness on AYA sense of bodily autonomy (including self-concept, history of other medical procedures, and concerns around mortality) reduces the attractiveness of LARC methods. The intersectionality of multiple oppressions, including racism, xenophobia, sexism, and historical reproductive coercion and injustice implicitly reduce the attractiveness of LARC methods for AYA patients from minority communities with chronic medical conditions at CHLA. Pediatric subspecialty providers' attitudes about sex, and comfort with providing patient-centered contraception counseling, as perceived by AYA patients, impact AYA patient attitudes towards and acceptance of LARC. Preference of implant vs. IUD is related to patient's age, family values, and type of medical condition, as well as their knowledge of historical events related to contraception in their community, independent of safety/medical contraindications. Additional perceived barriers, including fear or skepticism about LARC conferred by trusted sources of information such as family or social media, reduce the attractiveness and acceptance of LARC by AYA with chronic medical conditions
Evaluation of a Corporate Wellness Program
Chronic DiseaseThe purpose of this project is to determine the effectiveness of the corporate wellness program at Memorial Health System (MHS) in regards to: Improvement of health of employees Savings on health care expenses The corporate wellness program itself is not the object of the study, but rather the results of the program are the focus. The program will be a dynamic process, changing over time to address the needs of the hospital system employees. This study will look at the effects of the program as a whole to impact employee health and the cost of healthcare. This study will also evaluate individual components of the program (physical activity, stress management, etc) to determine specific benefits of those components to those who participate.
Comparative Effectiveness of IIMR Versus CDSMP
Mental IllnessChronic DiseaseThe study will enroll 600 people with serious mental illness who receive services at Centerstone in KY or TN and will compare two different evidence-based self-management interventions: Integrated Illness Management and Recovery (I-IMR), a program developed by the study team at Dartmouth that trains people with serious mental illness on physical and mental health self-management, and the Stanford Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (CDSMP), a program largely focused on physical health self-management that has been used widely in the general population.
Changes in Cardiovascular and Sleep Quality Parameters Under Eurythmy Therapy and Tai Chi in Comparison...
Fall PatientsElderly Patients5 moreENTAiER study is a multicentre randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy and safety of eurythmy therapy and Tai Chi in comparison to standard care in chronically ill elderly patients with increased risk of falling. Subjects will be randomized to eurythmy therapy or Tai Chi or standard care alone. To investigate the changes in cardiovascular and sleep quality parameters under Eurythmy Therapy and Tai Chi in comparison to Standard Care in this trial, a substudy will be conducted only at the ARCIM Institute. The substudy will recruit enrolled participants from the ENTAiER trial to record various cardiovascular and sleep quality parameters. The aim is to compare changes in cardiovascular and sleep quality parameters under eurythmy therapy, Tai Chi and standard care alone in chronically ill elderly patients with increased risk of falling.
Healthcare Renunciation in Respiratory Chronic Disease and Treatment Compliance (OBSERVE)
Obstructive Sleep ApneaRespiratory FailureHealth care renunciation is a factor that can alter patients' health status and increase the costs of its support. To date, there is no national data on the renunciation of care. This study will initially characterize the different forms of health care renunciation in patients with chronic respiratory diseases, treated with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) or non-invasive ventilation (NIV) , and analyze it impact on treatment compliance and health processes. The follow-up of these patients during 5 years will define renunciation trajectories (transition from the state of "renouncing" to "non-renouncing" and vice versa) and their impact on treatment compliance. The investigators hypothesize that a patient becoming renounced on a given treatment also decreases his treatment compliance (CPAP or NIV ). The impact of the renunciation trajectory on the patient's follow-up in terms of hospitalizations and deaths will also be studied.