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Effects of Functional Incidental Training in VA NHCU Residents

This study is currently recruiting patients.

Sponsored by: Department of Veterans Affairs
Information provided by: Department of Veterans Affairs

Purpose

This research on Functional Incidental Training ( FIT) primarily involves women residing in community nursing homes. It is an individualized rehabilitative protocol intended to improve mobility, endurance, strength and continence in frail, older, functionally impaired and disabled veterans.

Objectives of the project are as follows: 1) Test the effects of FIT on transfer ability, continence, ambulation/mobility, balance and fall risk, strength, and endurance; 2) Determine the characteristics of NHCU residents who respond to FIT; 3)Identify the most sensitive outcome measures related to FIT; and 4) Determine the labor costs of FIT relative to usual care.

Condition Treatment or Intervention Phase
Aging
 Procedure: Falls
Phase II

MedlinePlus consumer health information 

Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Educational/Counseling/Training, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Crossover Assignment, Efficacy Study

Further Study Details: 

Expected Total Enrollment:  24

Study start: January 1999;  Study completion: December 2002

This research on Functional Incidental Training ( FIT) primarily involves women in community nursing homes.

Objectives: 1. test the effects of FIT on functions such as transfer ability, continence, ambulation/mobility,balance and fall risk, strength, and endurance; 2. determine the characteristics of NHCU residents who respond to FIT; 3. identify the most sensitive outcome measures related to FIT; and 4. determine the labor costs of FIT relative to usual care.

. The intervention is an individualized rehabilitative protocol intended to improve mobility, endurance, strength and continence in frail, older, functionally impaired and disabled veterans in VA nursing home care units(NHCUs).The design is a multi-site cross-over design, to be carried out in five NHCUs (Atlanta, Durham, Salisbury, Augusta, Tuscaloosa) over about eight months in each site. About 24 residents will be recruited in each NHCU: 12 each will be randomized to initial intervention and control for 8 wks and evaluated; the controls will then receive the intervention and vice versa for another 8 wks with another evaluation. Patients are seen 4x a day for FIT activities, including walking/using wheel chair, prompted toileting, strengthening exercises. Outcome measures will be made in a blinded manner by Project Manager.

Eligibility

Ages Eligible for Study:  18 Years and above,  Genders Eligible for Study:  Both

Criteria

Functionally impaired elderly

Location and Contact Information

Joseph Ouslander, Ph.D.      (404) 728-5064    jouslan@emory.edu

Georgia
      VAMC, Decatur, Decatur,  Georgia,  United States; Recruiting
Joseph Ouslander, Phd  404-728-5064 

Study chairs or principal investigators

John Fryer, Ph.D., Asst. Director,  Department of Veterans Affairs, Program Analysis and Review Section (PARS), Rehabilitation Research & Development Service   
Victoria Mongiardo, Program Analyst,  Department of Veterans Affairs, Program Analysis and Review Section (PARS), Rehabilitation Research & Development Service   

More Information

Study ID Numbers:  E2226
Record last reviewed:  January 2001
Record first received:  March 14, 2001
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:  NCT00013507
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2004-11-09
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