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Increasing the Winter Community Participation of Older Adult Wheelchair Users

2. oktober 2019 opdateret af: University of Manitoba
The purpose of this study is to examine whether intervention strategies targeted at the level of the environment (e.g. improving access to community based leisure groups, transportation) can successfully promote the community participation experiences of community-dwelling older adult Manitobans who use wheelchairs in the winter.

Studieoversigt

Detaljeret beskrivelse

There is strong evidence to support that community-dwelling older adults who are able to maintain their involvement in social, recreational, spiritual and physical activities experience positive effects on their health and quality of life. While winter creates challenges to community participation for many Manitobans, these difficulties are magnified for older adults and particularly for older adults who use wheelchairs. The aim of this study is to explore ways to improve or maintain community participation of community-dwelling older adults who use wheelchairs in the winter. Using a single-subject design, five older adult Manitobans who are wheelchair users will each select three community-based participation goals to work on throughout the winter months. Each older adult participant will work with an occupational therapist to receive individually-focused interventions aimed at increasing his or her community participation. The investigators will use a client-centered outcome measure designed to detect changes in performance and satisfaction in the goals that the individual has self-identified as being important to him or her, yet difficult to perform. The findings of this study will help determine the feasibility of conducting a larger scale study that would include a greater number of older adult Manitobans. Older adult wheelchair users in Manitoba bear a disproportionate burden in the winter when aging, mobility limitations, and weather coincide to create conditions that make community participation exceedingly difficult. It is important to the health and well-being of older adult Manitobans to find effective ways to promote community engagement throughout the winter months.

Undersøgelsestype

Interventionel

Tilmelding (Faktiske)

4

Fase

  • Ikke anvendelig

Kontakter og lokationer

Dette afsnit indeholder kontaktoplysninger for dem, der udfører undersøgelsen, og oplysninger om, hvor denne undersøgelse udføres.

Studiesteder

    • Manitoba
      • Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, R3E0T6
        • University of Manitoba

Deltagelseskriterier

Forskere leder efter personer, der passer til en bestemt beskrivelse, kaldet berettigelseskriterier. Nogle eksempler på disse kriterier er en persons generelle helbredstilstand eller tidligere behandlinger.

Berettigelseskriterier

Aldre berettiget til at studere

70 år og ældre (Ældre voksen)

Tager imod sunde frivillige

Ja

Køn, der er berettiget til at studere

Alle

Beskrivelse

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age 70 or older, user of a manual or power wheelchair or scooter for outdoor mobility
  • Self-identifies a reduction in community participation throughout the winter months
  • Community-dwelling
  • Lives within the perimeter of Winnipeg.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Geriatric Depression Scale-SF score of 6 or more
  • Montreal Cognitive Assessment score of 25 or less

Studieplan

Dette afsnit indeholder detaljer om studieplanen, herunder hvordan undersøgelsen er designet, og hvad undersøgelsen måler.

Hvordan er undersøgelsen tilrettelagt?

Design detaljer

  • Primært formål: Andet
  • Tildeling: N/A
  • Interventionel model: Enkelt gruppeopgave
  • Maskning: Ingen (Åben etiket)

Våben og indgreb

Deltagergruppe / Arm
Intervention / Behandling
Andet: Behavioural
Participant-identified community based activity
The Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) is a client-centered outcome measure designed to detect changes in performance and satisfaction in occupations that the individual has self-identified as being important and difficult to perform. The COPM will be used to set self-identified, community-based activities as treatment goals.

Hvad måler undersøgelsen?

Primære resultatmål

Resultatmål
Foranstaltningsbeskrivelse
Tidsramme
Change in Occupational Performance Using the The Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) at 5 Months
Tidsramme: Initial and 5 month follow up
The Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) is a client-centered outcome measure designed to detect changes in performance and satisfaction in occupations that the individual has self-identified as being important and difficult to perform. The COPM has well-established psychometric properties and will be used as the primary outcome measure and will be used to set treatment goals, determine baseline stability, and detect change in performance of, and satisfaction with, the goals.
Initial and 5 month follow up

Sekundære resultatmål

Resultatmål
Foranstaltningsbeskrivelse
Tidsramme
World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 (WHO-DAS2)
Tidsramme: Initial and 5 month follow-up
The WHO-DAS 2.0 is a generic self-report health status measure, linked to the concepts of health and disability outlined in the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health and is intended to identify limitations in six domains with 36 items, including self-care, and community and social functioning experienced over the past 30 days. The WHO-DAS 2.0 is responsive to change, has excellent internal consistency, established content validity, and high convergent validity. The WHO-DAS 2.0 will be used to identify changes in overall health status that occur through the study. Uses a scale of 1-5 - 1=no difficulty and 5=extreme difficulty or cannot do. Sum of items within each domain are then summed across the 6 domains to result in a general disability summary score, converted to a metric from 0-100 with higher score indicating more disability.
Initial and 5 month follow-up

Samarbejdspartnere og efterforskere

Det er her, du vil finde personer og organisationer, der er involveret i denne undersøgelse.

Efterforskere

  • Ledende efterforsker: Jacquie Ripat, PhD, University of Manitoba

Datoer for undersøgelser

Disse datoer sporer fremskridtene for indsendelser af undersøgelsesrekord og resumeresultater til ClinicalTrials.gov. Studieregistreringer og rapporterede resultater gennemgås af National Library of Medicine (NLM) for at sikre, at de opfylder specifikke kvalitetskontrolstandarder, før de offentliggøres på den offentlige hjemmeside.

Studer store datoer

Studiestart (Faktiske)

1. december 2015

Primær færdiggørelse (Faktiske)

15. september 2017

Studieafslutning (Faktiske)

15. september 2017

Datoer for studieregistrering

Først indsendt

1. december 2015

Først indsendt, der opfyldte QC-kriterier

4. december 2015

Først opslået (Skøn)

7. december 2015

Opdateringer af undersøgelsesjournaler

Sidste opdatering sendt (Faktiske)

4. oktober 2019

Sidste opdatering indsendt, der opfyldte kvalitetskontrolkriterier

2. oktober 2019

Sidst verificeret

1. august 2016

Mere information

Begreber relateret til denne undersøgelse

Andre undersøgelses-id-numre

  • H2015:132

Plan for individuelle deltagerdata (IPD)

Planlægger du at dele individuelle deltagerdata (IPD)?

INGEN

Disse oplysninger blev hentet direkte fra webstedet clinicaltrials.gov uden ændringer. Hvis du har nogen anmodninger om at ændre, fjerne eller opdatere dine undersøgelsesoplysninger, bedes du kontakte register@clinicaltrials.gov. Så snart en ændring er implementeret på clinicaltrials.gov, vil denne også blive opdateret automatisk på vores hjemmeside .

Kliniske forsøg med Skrøbelige ældre

Kliniske forsøg med Participant-identified community based activity

Abonner