Status:

RECRUITING

Improving Needs Among Older Adults

Lead Sponsor:

Duke University

Collaborating Sponsors:

National Institute on Aging (NIA)

Conditions:

Critical Illness

Palliative Care

Eligibility:

All Genders

18+ years

Phase:

NA

Brief Summary

Millions of older adults receive care in intensive care units (ICUs) annually. However, the quality and accessibility of ICU-based palliative care is highly variable across hospitals and clinicians, d...

Detailed Description

Millions of older adults receive care in intensive care units (ICUs) annually. However, the quality and accessibility of ICU-based palliative care is highly variable across hospitals and clinicians, d...

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

  • Patients (who are not interviewed but whose characteristics prompt enrollment of family members)
  • Adult aged ≥18 years
  • Managed in an adult medical, cardiac, trauma, surgical, or neurological ICU
  • Serious acute illness associated with a need for invasive mechanical ventilation
  • ICU team expect patient to require mechanical ventilation for 2 or more days
  • Family members
  • Adult aged ≥18 years
  • Family member: self-described as the individual (related or unrelated) who provides the most support and with whom the eligible patient has a significant relationship (Society of Critical Care Medicine definition of family; Davidson J, et al. Crit Care Med, 45:103-128; 2017)
  • ICU clinicians
  • Adult aged ≥18 years
  • ICU clinician: ICU attending caring for the eligible patient on the day of family member informed consent

Exclusion

  • Patients
  • Death or full comfort care plan expected within 24 hours by ICU attending or fellow physician Rationale: measurable intervention effect unlikely
  • Palliative care consultative team and/or palliative care specialists are currently involved in the patient's care.
  • Rationale: this would dilute the intervention's effect.
  • ICU length of stay \>4 days during current ICU admission. Rationale: this would dilute intervention effect by widening the timeframe of family-clinician interactions and limiting standardization.
  • 6\. Imprisoned person. Rationale: this is a vulnerable population.
  • Family members
  • Low palliative care need burden (i.e., NEST scale score \<15) at baseline. Rationale: if there are very low baseline needs, the intervention cannot impact the primary outcome measure (i.e., NEST).
  • Lack of English or Spanish fluency, operationalized as need for a translator to understand medical forms or participate in medical discussions.
  • Rationale: the app has not been translated into other languages; also, many outcome measures aren't validated in languages other than English and Spanish.
  • Endorsement of suicidal ideation (i.e., PHQ-9 suicidality item) at the time of baseline data collection.
  • Rationale: this indicates a serious level of distress that will require professional assistance beyond that provided by the intervention (or control).
  • Patient regains decisional capacity after informed consent but before the first family meeting. Rationale: as in our past ICU-based studies, this circumstance (the entry of the patient as a decision maker), would substantially change the nature of the interactions of family members and clinicians.
  • The ICU clinician changes from a consented clinician to a non-consented clinician before the first family meeting. Rationale: in this circumstance the intervention cannot be fully deployed.
  • ICU clinicians None

Key Trial Info

Start Date :

September 16 2025

Trial Type :

INTERVENTIONAL

Allocation :

ESTIMATED

End Date :

December 31 2028

Estimated Enrollment :

350 Patients enrolled

Trial Details

Trial ID

NCT06588556

Start Date

September 16 2025

End Date

December 31 2028

Last Update

December 5 2025

Active Locations (4)

Enter a location and click search to find clinical trials sorted by distance.

Page 1 of 1 (4 locations)

1

University of Alabama-Birmingham

Birmingham, Alabama, United States, 35233

2

Columbia University

New York, New York, United States, 10032

3

Duke University Medical Center

Durham, North Carolina, United States, 27710

4

Medical University of South Carolina

Charleston, South Carolina, United States, 29403

Improving Needs Among Older Adults | DecenTrialz