← Back to Search

Patient Priorities Care for Multiple Chronic Conditions (PPC-NC Trial)

N/A
Waitlist Available
Led By Crystal Cené, MD, MPH
Research Sponsored by University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Eligibility Criteria Checklist
Specific guidelines that determine who can or cannot participate in a clinical trial
Must have
Be older than 18 years old
Timeline
Screening 3 weeks
Treatment Varies
Follow Up baseline, month 12
Awards & highlights

PPC-NC Trial Summary

This trial is testing whether a new intervention called Patient Priorities Care (PPC) can help older adults with multiple chronic conditions better manage their care by focusing on their self-identified health priorities.

Eligible Conditions
  • Multiple Chronic Conditions
  • Comorbidity

PPC-NC Trial Timeline

Screening ~ 3 weeks
Treatment ~ Varies
Follow Up ~baseline, month 12
This trial's timeline: 3 weeks for screening, Varies for treatment, and baseline, month 12 for reporting.

Treatment Details

Study Objectives

Outcome measures can provide a clearer picture of what you can expect from a treatment.
Primary outcome measures
Change in Mean Treatment Burden Score (Baseline to Month 12)
Change in Mean Treatment Burden Score (Baseline to Month 6)
Secondary outcome measures
Change in Electronic Health Record Documentation of Decision-making Based on Patients' Health Priorities (Baseline to Month 12)
Change in Mean Shared Decision Making Score (Baseline to Month 12)
Change in Mean Shared Decision Making Score (Baseline to Month 6)
+4 more

PPC-NC Trial Design

2Treatment groups
Experimental Treatment
Active Control
Group I: Intervention Arm - Implementing Patient Priorities CareExperimental Treatment1 Intervention
Practice staff and providers will be trained on how to identify patient health priorities. Staff and clinicians will implement Patient Priorities Care, document priorities in EHRs, and align patient priorities with health care decisions.
Group II: Control ArmActive Control1 Intervention
Control arm practices will receive no intervention and patients will receive usual care.
Treatment
First Studied
Drug Approval Stage
How many patients have taken this drug
Patient Priorities Care
2016
N/A
~420

Find a Location

Who is running the clinical trial?

National Institute on Aging (NIA)NIH
1,675 Previous Clinical Trials
28,020,885 Total Patients Enrolled
3 Trials studying Multiple Chronic Conditions
240 Patients Enrolled for Multiple Chronic Conditions
Yale UniversityOTHER
1,853 Previous Clinical Trials
2,738,561 Total Patients Enrolled
3 Trials studying Multiple Chronic Conditions
1,624 Patients Enrolled for Multiple Chronic Conditions
North Carolina Translational and Clinical Sciences InstituteOTHER
56 Previous Clinical Trials
4,303 Total Patients Enrolled
1 Trials studying Multiple Chronic Conditions
25 Patients Enrolled for Multiple Chronic Conditions

Frequently Asked Questions

These questions and answers are submitted by anonymous patients, and have not been verified by our internal team.

What are the key aims of this experiment?

"This clinical trial seeks to measure the Change in Mean Treatment Burden Score (Baseline to Month 12) over a 6-month period. Additional secondary objectives include tracking changes in Number of Prescribed Medications, Electronic Health Record Documentation of Decision-making Based on Patients' Health Priorities and Shared Decision Making Scores using the CollaboRATE scale."

Answered by AI

Is this trial accepting new participants at this time?

"Clinicaltrials.gov shows that this medical trial, which was originally posted on July 1st 2022 and last edited June 2nd 2022 is not currently recruiting for participants. However, there are 939 other trials actively searching for patients to join them in their research endeavours."

Answered by AI
~0 spots leftby Apr 2025