Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
What the investigators propose. The use of disruptive digital technologies for their potential to improve caregivers training, ensure the adequacy of care and achieve a greater quality of life for recipients; increase the efficiency of interventions to support caregivers, quickly reaching a greater number of people; democratize access to adequate care; dignify the lives of people working in this sector, mostly women; develop a new sector of the economy by promoting the modernization and technification of the sector. The project seeks to place people at the center of interventions while respecting their digital rights. The investigators identify as disruptive technologies those based on recent innovations (such as virtual and augmented reality, artificial intelligence AI) with a high capacity to evolve rapidly, adapting to very different needs and sectors, and a high capacity to generate new business models. These emerging technologies open up new opportunities to improve the well-being of dependent people, provide new skills (including soft ones) to caregivers and would be also useful against gender stereotypes in the caregiving sector.
Full description
Feasibility study of VR/AR/AI applications to the context of caregiver training in three phases including mixed methodologies: (1) qualitative (to collect key information to elaborate immersive environments for VR/AR-based interventions), (2) experimental (to test the effectiveness of the intervention targeting caregivers (informal and formal) to provide safe home care, including cost-effectiveness analysis, (3) prototype development to capture and analyze the performance of home care to promote improvements in training programs through VR/AR. General objective. The primary aim is to investigate whether the provision of care in the home of persons suffering multiple pathologies and polypharmacy by trained formal/informal caregivers using VR/AR is more efficient than traditional training. Secondary aims are to provide competencies (knowledge, skills, and attitudes) that contribute to reducing care and medication errors made by caregivers, contributing to recipients staying at home for as long as possible; and to determine to what extent AI allows us to continuously update the VR training material. This Project is in line with the WHO SDG3 "Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages". It also responds to the WHO challenge of Medication Without Harm. At national level, this study reinforces those policies aim to strengthen the new care economy and reduce the gender equality gap (Component 22, June 16, 2021).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Study participants are qualified or unqualified caregivers who oversee patients in one of two groups: 1) multi-pathological, polymedicated, dependent, and 2) devices and catheters (oncological, ostomy, etc.). To facilitate recruitment, each centre will be provided with templates adjusted to the participants and arms to which they are committed. The inclusion criteria for each group are detailed below.
Inclusion criteria for carers of multi-pathological, polymedicated and dependent patients
Inclusion criteria for caregivers of patients with devices and catheters
Exclusion criteria
The exclusion criteria are common to both groups of carers:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
333 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal