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Tundra lists 2 Hospital Readmissions clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT07136350
Nurse Caring Communication Engagement
The overall goal will be to explore the effectiveness of caring communication coaching with the implementation of a discharge tool in the acute care setting and its impact on the nurse-patient relationship. Integrating communication strategies through a caring lens with an educational tool will seek to address the missing components that satisfy patient care experience, satisfaction with care, prevention of complications, reduction of readmission rates, and improved outcomes. This study will evaluate how these interventions can narrow the gap in the literature and enhance the quality of patient care which can ultimately improve health outcomes.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-03-04
1 state
NCT04981977
Enhancing the Care Transitions Intervention With Peer Support to Reduce Disparities
Unplanned hospital readmissions are extremely costly to patients and our healthcare system. Being readmitted to the hospital also leads to increased risk of health complications for patients including infections and impairments in functioning. Hospital readmissions are particularly common among older adults. Further, racial/ethnic disparities are evident in readmission rates and are the greatest among African American and Latino/Hispanic older adults. Effective, sustainable, and culturally appropriate interventions to improve outcomes, reduce unplanned hospital readmissions, and reduce health disparities are urgently needed. The proposed randomized controlled trial will evaluate the effectiveness of a novel transitional care strategy designed to avoid unplanned hospital readmissions and improve patient health outcomes in a racially/ethnically diverse sample of older adults who have been admitted to the hospital due to a chronic health condition. Eric Coleman's Care Transitions Intervention (CTI) has been identified as the strategy most successfully implemented and evaluated in multiple settings and systems of care. CTI has been shown to reduce hospital readmissions for non-Hispanic White older adults, however its' effects have not been as strong for minority older adults in some studies and research trials have not recruited a sufficient number of racial/ethnic minorities to examine outcomes by race or ethnicity. Thus, it is unknown whether CTI is effective for racial/ethnic minority older adults who suffer disproportionately high readmission rates. Further, studies of transitions interventions suggest that older adult and racial/ethnic minority patients require additional assistance and support during transitions in care. The researchers hypothesize the addition of peer support will enhance and maximize the benefit of the CTI and increase its' cultural sensitivity and future sustainability. The proposed 3-arm trial is designed to evaluate the Care Transitions Intervention (CTI) and CTI + Peer Support (PS), as compared to usual care (UC), on unplanned all-cause hospital readmissions occurring within 6 months (assessed at 30 days, 90 days and 6 months) and secondary health system (i.e., ED visits) and patient-centered outcomes (i.e., self-efficacy managing chronic disease, quality of life, functional status and mortality) among 402 hospitalized African American and Latino/Hispanic older adults (age 60+) who have a chronic physical illness (e.g., cardiovascular disease, diabetes, COPD) and are being discharged from the hospital back to the community.
Gender: All
Ages: 60 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-02-07
1 state