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Improving the Collaborative Health of Minority COVID-19 Survivor and Carepartner Dyads
Sponsor: University of South Carolina
Summary
This study tests the efficacy of a dyadic intervention to mitigate the adverse health consequences of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS- CoV-2 )(COVID-19) in African American (AA) adults with pre-existing chronic health conditions and their informal carepartners (IC). Socioeconomically disadvantaged, older, and Black/African American from rural regions are burdened with greater rates of chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, and stroke.
Official title: Improving the Collaborative Health of Minority COVID-19 Survivor and Carepartner Dyads Through Interventions Targeting Social and Structural Health Inequities.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
500
Start Date
2023-01-03
Completion Date
2026-06-30
Last Updated
2025-05-16
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Integrating Community-based Intervention Under Nurse Guidance with Families (iCINGS FAM)
The intervention consists of two planning sessions with the dyad (over 2 weeks) followed by eight topic-guided sessions delivered the RN-CHW team over 12 weeks (weekly the first 4 weeks, then bi-weekly) (Table 3). Key components of these televisits include COVID-19 risk mitigation, chronic disease management, medication adherence, family functioning/support, and community and health systems resource identification and referral with ongoing goal planning. The RN-CHW will meet weekly for progress review, follow up planning, and setting up anticipatory guidance for the next session with the dyads. The RN and CHW will also review IC or survivor dissatisfaction and other issues that require more immediate attention. RN-CHW planning will be assessed to make sure each televisit remain topic focused yet incorporates flexibility to suit the needs of each dyad.
Locations (1)
University of South Carolina
Columbia, South Carolina, United States