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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07418268

Communication for Early Mobilisation of People Living With Dementia Following Surgery for Hip Fracture

Sponsor: University of Nottingham

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This goal of this study is to identify ways that healthcare professionals communicate that are effective in helping a person living with dementia to stand or walk after surgery for a broken hip (hip fracture). We aim to identify 'what works' in successfully helping people with dementia to mobilise early, and share this in practice. The main question the research aims to answer is: What healthcare professional communication practices are effective in achieving early and continued mobilisation among people living with dementia following hip fracture surgery? We will use a research method called 'Conversation Analysis', to look at the fine detail of the language healthcare professionals use and responses to it. We will make video recordings of real-life ward care, when healthcare staff are trying to help a person with dementia get up early after hip fracture surgery. We will involve people with dementia in decisions to take part and get agreement from their families before we record anything. We have done this successfully in two previous studies. We will record up to 50 episodes of care on three trauma orthopaedic wards. We will identify specific, practical recommendations and 'teachable' approaches: ways of speaking, or sequences of requests or instructions. We will work with people with dementia, family carers, educators and clinicians to do this. We will use clips of videos in future communication training.

Official title: Communication Practices to Achieve Early Mobilisation of People Living With Dementia Following Surgery for Hip Fracture: a Conversation Analytical Study ('VideOing to Improve Communication Through Education - Hip Fracture', VOICE-HF)

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

200

Start Date

2026-02

Completion Date

2026-09

Last Updated

2026-02-18

Healthy Volunteers

No