Financial Counseling for Dementia Family Caregivers in Early and Middle Adulthood

Part of paid clinical trials in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Sponsor
University of Utah
Study ID
NCT07681401
Status
Recruiting

Conditions

  • Dementia
  • Family Caregivers
  • Financial Coaching
  • Financial Wellbeing

Eligibility Criteria

Sex
ALL
Age
25 Years - 55 Years
Healthy Volunteers
Accepted

Interventions

  • Financial Counseling and Advocacy — BEHAVIORAL
    Financial assessment, coaching, self-advocacy support, referrals, educational toolkit, and follow-up

Study Details

The goal of this National Institutes of Health (NIH) Stage 1a study is to develop and pilot test a research- and community-informed financial counseling and advocacy (FCA) intervention for dementia family caregivers in early and middle adulthood. The main question it aims to answer is: Is a research- and community-informed financial counseling and advocacy intervention usable, feasible and acceptable for dementia family caregivers in early and middle adulthood? Participants will engage in a four-week single group financial counseling and advocacy intervention and complete pre- and post-intervention measures addressing financial well-being, caregiver strain, workplace productivity, and flourishing along with usability, acceptability, and feasibility measures.

Key Dates

Start date
Apr 10, 2026
Status verified
Jun 2026
Primary completion
Oct 31, 2026
Completion
Oct 31, 2026

Study Design

Enrollment
10 participants (estimated)
Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE

Arms

  • Experimental: Financial Counseling and Advocacy Arm

Primary Outcome Measure

Feasibility of Intervention Measure (FIM) [ Time Frame: After intervention completion at 4 weeks ]

Central Contacts

Locations (1)

FacilityCityStateZIPSite coordinators
University of Utah College of NursingSalt Lake CityUtah84112
Megan Thomas Hebdon
(801) 581-3414
Megan Thomas Hebdon, PhD, DNP (PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR)

Find similar trials in Salt Lake City, UT

Related Studies