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Clinical Research Directory

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6 clinical studies listed.

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Social Isolation or Loneliness

Tundra lists 6 Social Isolation or Loneliness clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT07123298

CAPABLE Care + Connect

In this evaluation scale-up research project, the investigators seek to test an implementation of CAPABLE on the infrastructure of home-based primary care for individuals who may experience social isolation and/or loneliness. These two home-based care programs may improve each other and provide opportunity to further improve quality of life for people living with disabilities and the caregivers. The purpose of this mixed methods study is to adapt and test CAPABLE, an existing evidence-based program, to a new target population with the scalable infrastructure of home-based primary care.

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-03-16

1 state

Social Isolation in Older Adults
Social Isolation or Loneliness
Social Isolation
+3
RECRUITING

NCT07069179

Feasibility of Choose to Move Replacement Ready

Choose to Move (CTM) is a 3-month, choice-based health-promoting program for low active older adults being scaled-up across British Columbia (BC), Canada. Recently, the investigators adapted CTM for the \>14000 people in BC who are on surgical waitlists for total knee replacement or total hip replacement (TKR/THR) for osteoarthritis (OA). The primary goal of this observational study is to learn if the adapted program, Choose to Move Replacement Ready (CTM-RR), is feasible to deliver to people with hip and/or knee osteoarthritis who are on surgical waitlists for TKR/THR. Participants who enrol in CTM-RR will answer online survey questions about the program and about their physical activity, mobility, pain, function, quality of life, willingness to undergo surgery, overall perception of their joint condition, psychosocial health, self-efficacy, social isolation, loneliness, and sedentary time. CTM-RR activity coaches will also answer online survey questions about the program. CTM-RR participants, activity coaches, and referral partners will also participate in interviews about the program.

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-03-12

1 state

Osteoarthritis
Osteoarthritis (OA) of the Knee
Osteoarthritis, Hip
+7
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT06656650

Commensality Groups: A Professional Fulfillment Intervention for Medical Students in Their Clinical Years

Medical students are at high risk for burnout, depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation and substance use disorder with burnout seen as a mitigating factor for suicidal ideation. Help-seeking among medical students suffering from burnout is only 30%. The highest rates of burnout among medical students is at the end of their clinical rotations, with estimates of up to 60%. "Commensality groups" have been found to significantly reduce burnout and improve meaning in work by creating opportunity for connection and collegiality among physicians. These groups consist of providing a reimbursed monthly meal with structured questions that generate conversation for the first 15 minutes with 6-8 participants meeting monthly, for six months. Physician participants in Commensality groups maintain these gains one year later. The investigators propose to apply the model of Commensality groups to medical students who are launching into their experience clinical practice, and have been on clinical rotations for at least 4 months. The investigators will form randomly assigned groups of 6-8 medical students with 1 resident leader. The resident leader role has been added to encourage compliance with the standardized discussion questions and to avoid the potential negative impact of a "venting" session. The overall intention of this study is to explore whether Commensality groups can increase well-being for medical students in their clerkship years, as it has previously been shown to do for residents and physicians.

Gender: All

Updated: 2026-01-21

1 state

Professional Fulfillment
Burnout
Social Isolation or Loneliness
RECRUITING

NCT06899308

Health Surveillance at Constructor University Bremen (CUB) and Among HAW-Hamburg Employees

The aim of Health Surveillance is to analyze and describe the state of health of students at Constructor University, key influencing factors and individual resources by using mixed-method design.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-12-19

Social Isolation or Loneliness
Anxiety
Anxiety Depression (Mild or Not Persistent)
+12
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT07089914

Health Surveillance at University of Applied Science Hamburg (HAW)

The aim of Health Surveillance 2025 is to analyze and describe the state of health of employees at University of Applied Science Hamburg, key influencing factors and individual resources.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-08-12

Social Isolation or Loneliness
Anxiety
Anxiety Acute
+8
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT06606431

ACOMPANYEM: A COMmunity Program Accessing Lonely, Disabled Neighbors (Young, Elder, and Midlife)

Social prescription prioritizes interventions for people at risk of social isolation or unwanted loneliness based on community assets and offers them a series of activities that can contribute to their emotional well-being as a healthy alternative to medicalized healthcare. Disabled homebound people deal with more difficulty accessing the social health assets available in the community. Volunteers from the same neighborhood may accomplish the social function of accompaniment and listening accessing them at home or walking them out to attain social prescription goals. The Community Emotional Well-Being Referent (REBEC) may enhance all of this by conducting emotional counseling and management groups for volunteers. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness of a community intervention of accompaniment and emotional management with volunteers on the unwanted loneliness of people with social isolation, their emotional well-being, and their quality of life. METHODOLOGY: a community-based quasi-experimental non-randomized pre-post intervention study with control group, and a qualitative study. Candidate detection by the Driving Group, composed of neighborhood organizations and the community health team, was conducted opportunistically. Recruitment of isolated individuals and volunteers was carried out, with registration based on inclusion criteria. Implementation of the multi-level intervention for volunteers and isolated individuals took place at home or by participating in community resources on the street, with parallel support groups for volunteers using REBEC. Each round of participants was followed for three months, continuing until the sample was complete. Qualitative analysis was conducted upon reaching information saturation. In cases where architectural barriers were detected, technical aids (such as portable stairlifts) were proposed, and their impact was studied.

Gender: All

Ages: 16 Years - Any

Updated: 2024-09-23

Social Isolation or Loneliness
Homebound Persons
Disabled Persons