Plain-English translation of NCT06176131 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
This trial is testing a new model called "Cardio-share" that uses telemedicine (remote health monitoring) to help heart failure patients who are too vulnerable to attend traditional heart rehabilitation. During your hospital stay, nurses will help you learn to use a Danish health app called MinSP-Ass., where you can report your symptoms and vital signs. The hospital cardiologist and your regular doctor will work together to monitor you and provide support after you leave the hospital.
Many heart failure patients have repeated emergency hospital visits and can't participate in standard rehabilitation programs because of other health conditions or life circumstances. This trial aims to see if a coordinated telemedicine approach—where your hospital team and primary care doctor communicate and monitor you remotely—can reduce emergency visits and help you stay healthier at home.
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While you are in the hospital, nurses and medical students will teach you how to use the MinSP-Ass. app on your phone or tablet. Your hospital cardiologist will coordinate with your regular doctor (through secure messaging and video calls if needed) to create a plan for your care after discharge. After you leave the hospital, you will use the app to report symptoms and vital signs like blood pressure or weight, and your care team will review this information remotely. The study will track whether this coordinated telemedicine approach helps reduce your future hospital visits.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 2, 2026 · Not medical advice
Denmark