Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04459546

Nurse-led COPD Self-management Intervention

The Effect of Rational Drug Use and Symptom Control Training on Self-efficacy, Emotional Status and Clinical Parameters in COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
41 (actual)
Sponsor
Pamukkale University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Introduction: Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) disease highest mortality and morbidity of respiratory diseases that third cause of death in the world and Turkey. Purpose: Purpose of study improve self-efficacy, anxiety/depression, symptom control and exercise capacity, reduce use of health care of COPD patients. Method: The study was conducted with a randomized controlled design. This study were included 41 COPD patients (İntervention=20, Control=21). Data collection tools were patient description form, COPD Self-Efficacy Scale (CSES), COPD Assessment Test (CAT), Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale (HAD), 6-Minute Walk Test (MWT) and tele-health form. Intervention consists patient education, training booklet and 3 month follow-up. Control group patients received only general care. The final test was performed three months later.

Detailed description

The skills and the knowledge necessary in COPD management and interventions required to develop this skill have conceptualized as self-management. The complex structure of COPD self-management includes medication compliance, smoking cessation, maintaining and increasing exercise capacity, regulating nutrition, healthy lifestyle changes, vaccination and symptom management. According to the GOLD (2017) report, copd self-management cannot be achieved only with didactic teaching. Skill acquisition, behavior change and motivational interventions should be applied with education. Among these interventions, action plans are among the tools frequently used in preventing tele-health COPD attacks. Action plans can be used effectively in COPD to prevent attacks, symptom management and reduce the risk of anxiety / depression. One objectives of self-management is to reduce use of health care. Symptom management; It has been stated that it is effective in reducing hospitalization and days of hospitalization especially in patients with COPD diseases. In studies involving self-management in COPD, self-management interventions increase health-related quality of life, control symptom, reduce the risk of anxiety / depression, increase self-efficacy, reduce respiratory hospital stays, reduce severity and duration of attacks, and reduce mortality at low impact. It is stated that the interventions made in the GOLD (2017) report provide improvements for health-related quality of life and patient outcomes. Because of self-management is a multi-component concept, variety in type of intervention and follow-up make it difficult to reach generalizable evidence. Although many health professionals work with patients with COPD, self-management interventions are known to be carried out mostly by nurses or by multidisciplinary groups involving nurses. This study is an example of applicable self-management intervention in terms of disease information and general management, rational drug use, symptom control training and evaluation with medium-term monitoring. It can contribute to literature in terms of determining the effect of nurse-managed self-management intervention.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALpatient education, training booklet, 3 months tele healthPatient education includes general disease information, COPD self-management and symptom control. The education face-to-face and practical training was provided by the researcher. The training booklet was prepared by the researcher. The readability of the booklet was very easy and its comprehensibility was tested by pre-application. Tele monitoring was done by the researcher for support and motivation. The participants were called 4 times by phone.

Timeline

Start date
2018-08-28
Primary completion
2019-02-17
Completion
2019-05-30
First posted
2020-07-07
Last updated
2022-02-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04459546. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.