Standard Drug Therapy vs. Implanted Defibrillator for Primary Prevention of Sudden Cardiac Death...
Coronary Heart DiseaseCongestive Heart Failure3 moreRecent ACC/AHA/ESC guidelines recommend prophylactic ICD implantation in most patients with coronary heart disease and LVEF < 40%. Current Canadian guidelines recommend ICDs for primary prophylaxis in CAD patients with LVEF < 30% (Class I recommendation). There are very sparse data to recommend ICD implantation in patients with EF between 30 and 40 %. This study will randomize patients with CHD and an EF between 30 and 40% to ICD therapy vs. No ICD therapy. The primary outcome is mortality and the study is powered as a non-inferiority trial to test the hypothesis that mortality in patients with no ICD is not more than 1% greater (absolute yearly increase) than patients receiving an ICD.
Replicating MamaToto in Rural Tanzania
Maternal DeathNewborn DeathThis study aimed to adapt and implement a district-led, policy-based, low cost Maternal and Newborn Health (MNH) intervention package using the MamaToto process, proven successful in Uganda, in rural Tanzania. The investigators hypothesized that the 'MamaToto Package' will be successfully implemented in the Misungwi District and will be effective in improving key maternal and newborn health indicators of study participants.
Truthful Information on Chemotherapy and Its Impact on Chemotherapy at the End of Life
Stage IV Lung CancerPatients with metastatic cancer have a substantial symptom burden and may receive aggressive care at the end of life. There is evidence that the use of chemotherapy near the end of life is not related to its likelihood of providing benefit and the overuse of aggressive anticancer therapies near the end of life may result in more toxicity than clinical benefit. Moreover, proposing new lines of treatment after successive therapeutic failures may be a way of avoiding discussion of prognosis and advance care planning. It has been proposed that systems not providing overly aggressive care near the end of life would be the ones in which less than 10% of patients receive chemotherapy in the last 14 days of life. Presently the first consultation between patient and oncologist is ruled in France by the first "Plan Cancer" and the "Dispositif d'annonce" (announcement planning). Oncologists are supposed to explain the diagnosis of cancer and to present a treatment plan. In routine practice for metastatic non curable cancer patients, chemotherapy is presented as the leading therapy and its side effects are explained. The use of chemotherapy has been associated with the worsening of two major competitive life-threatening conditions for cancer patients: cachexia and thrombo-embolic events. Nevertheless the risk of worsening both those conditions is hardly explained in routine practice. This study proposes to examine in a monocentric interventional prospective randomized trial, the impact of a particular way for the oncologist to present chemotherapy at the diagnosis stage on the easiness of timely chemotherapy interruption at the end of life. The main objective is to determine whether or not the explanation of the potential role of anticancer chemotherapy in worsening life-threatening conditions impacts the proportion of patients receiving chemotherapy in the last 30 days of life compared with usual presentation. Secondary objectives are to determine the impact of this communication strategy on overall survival and other indicators of aggressiveness of care and palliative care resources use. The hypothesis is that the intervention will allow 15% of patients receiving anticancer therapy during the last 30 days of life, as compared to 30% in the control group. The investigators expect that the intervention evaluated in this study will reduce the rate of patients receiving chemotherapy during the last 30 days of life hopefully improving the quality of end of life care. A secondary objective is overall survival and this study will therefore verify that the intervention arm is not associated with poorer overall survival. But more probably investigators expect patients in the intervention arm to have an improved overall survival mainly link to a decrease in harms due to chemotherapy given near the end of life and to better palliative care. In effect the hypothesis is that showing the life-threatening risks associated with chemotherapy and thus reducing for patients the importance of this treatment will leave room for improved palliative care as shown notably by earlier and more frequent referral to palliative care specialists. If this trial is positive, it will prove the capital role of patient-doctor communication in cancer care and that few differences in communication strategy could improve end of life care and maybe even survival. The impact on the oncology community would be major since the intervention could be easily transposed in all practices at no additional cost. It would also emphasize the importance of communication skills and human relationship in the very technical field of medical oncology.
Intervention in Spirituality at the End of Life. The Kibo Protocol
Palliative CareThis work aims to study the benefits that the therapeutic interview Kibo in palliative care patients can have for spirituality. A parallel randomized controlled trial of two groups was performed. Information was collected on 60 palliative care patients during the moments before and after the intervention.
BetterBirth: A Trial of the WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist Program
Maternal DeathMaternal Morbidity2 moreThe purpose of this study is to measure the impact of a checklist-based childbirth safety program (the WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist Program) on reduction of severe maternal, fetal, and newborn harm in institutional deliveries in north India.
Improving the Quality of End-of-Life Communication for Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary...
Pulmonary DiseaseCOPD2 moreThe purpose of this study is to evaluate a multifaceted intervention to improve the quality of end-of-life communication between patients with COPD and their primary care providers using information about patients preferences for end of life care and how to communicate and use this information to activate patients, family members, and healthcare providers.
Conducting Perioperative Code Status and Goals of Care Discussions: A Bi-Institutional Study to...
Shared Decision MakingEnd of LifeDespite the importance of preoperative code status and goals of care discussion (CSD/GOCD), a formal curriculum for anesthesiology residents is lacking. Residents are often uncomfortable conducting these conversations and there is a lack of research investigating the effectiveness of formal, evidence-based teaching during anesthesia training. The investigators propose to develop a novel skills training program with the aims to assess its immediate effect on CSD/GOCD skills, long-term internalization of the CSD training, and the authenticity, feasibility and acceptability of the CSD program and observed standardized patient encounter (OSCE) interaction. In this prospective, randomized study, first year anesthesia residents will be assigned to the study or control group. Both groups will undergo pre- and post-intervention OSCEs. The control group will complete the online modules only, while the study group will complete the entire skills training program consisting of online modules, self-assessments, and small group exercises. To measure CSD/GOCD proficiency, all participants will interview trained patient actors in pre-and post intervention OSCE. Investigators will use existing scoring systems and surveys. Standard patient encounters will be video recorded and reviewed by two blinded clinician graders. The pre- and post-participation survey will assess comfort and experience with CSD/GOCD. The follow up surveys will assess long-term retention of training, comfort and interim experiences. Investigators will perform a validation of the existing CSD/GOCD assessment tools for use in the perioperative setting. If there is a clinically significant demonstrable benefit, investigators expect that the results will lead to a formalization of this innovative curriculum on a national scale.
An Algorithmic Approach to Ventilator Withdrawal at the End of Life
Critical CarePalliative CareThe proposed study is an important, under-investigated area of ICU care for terminally ill patients undergoing terminal ventilator withdrawal. The proposed research has relevance to public health because an algorithmic approach to the ventilator withdrawal process will enhance clinicians' ability to conduct the process while assuring patient comfort, using opioids and/or benzodiazepines effectively.
End-of-Life Care for African Americans: An Outpatient Intervention
Advance Care PlanningRacial differences in health care are documented across the health care continuum and persist in aging and end-of-life (EOL) care. African Americans (AA) and other underrepresented minorities often choose more aggressive therapies in the terminal stages of illness. Main reasons for these EOL disparities include: lack of knowledge of and misperceptions about palliative and hospice care, spiritual beliefs, and mistrust in the health care system. Despite the presence of national hospice guidelines, interventions addressing these disparities have been limited and often not rigorously evaluated. Most interventions to promote EOL care were done in majority populations and focused predominantly on trying to change physician awareness of patient's pain, symptoms, and values or to change physician communication behavior. While these early studies made tremendous contributions to the study of EOL care and the needs of the terminally ill, the interventions associated with these studies did not reach their desired effectiveness. The investigator proposes an innovative strategy that would focus specifically on previously identified physician and patient barriers to utilization of advance directives, palliative care, and hospice care among AA cancer patients. The goal of this patient-centered project is to increase the awareness of and willingness to discuss EOL care options among AAs with metastatic cancer. To overcome the dual challenges of physicians' difficulty with prognostication and reluctance to discuss EOL care, the investigator will harness data in the electronic medical record (EMR) to automatically identify AA patients with metastatic breast, lung, colorectal, prostate and other serious cancer who are eligible for counseling about palliative and EOL care options. To change AA patients' knowledge and attitudes toward palliative and EOL care options, and address issues of medical mistrust, the investigator will design and pilot test a culturally sensitive, patient-targeted intervention that will combine multimedia materials and a culturally concordant lay health advisor (LHA) who will deliver tailored education and counseling. The investigator has chosen a LHA delivery strategy because past studies have shown that they are best suited to address medical mistrust and perceived conflict between spiritual beliefs and health care decisions.
Hospice and End-of-life Symptom Monitoring & Support Using an Automated System Designed for Family...
DeathCancerImproving end-of-life care and the suffering caused by poorly controlled symptoms is an important public health concern. The development of an automated telephone symptom monitoring and support system that assists caregivers in providing end-of-life care and communicating information to the patient's hospice nurse has the potential to enhance the management of common end of life symptoms, thus reducing the suffering of patients at end of life as well as the suffering of their family caregivers. This study has developed such a system and is testing the effectiveness of this system.