Changeflow GovPing Healthcare & Life Sciences Stress Ball Effects on Nausea, Anxiety, and Fat...
Routine Notice Added Final

Stress Ball Effects on Nausea, Anxiety, and Fatigue in Stomach Cancer Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy

Favicon for changeflow.com ClinicalTrials.gov Studies
Published
Detected
Email

Summary

The National Institutes of Health registered a new clinical trial on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT07540169) studying the effect of stress ball intervention on chemotherapy-induced nausea, anxiety, and fatigue in patients with stomach cancer. The trial will observe patients receiving the stress ball as a non-pharmacological supportive care tool during cancer treatment.

Published by NIH on changeflow.com . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

NIH registered a new clinical trial on ClinicalTrials.gov designated NCT07540169. The study will observe the effects of a stress ball intervention on chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting, anxiety, and fatigue in patients diagnosed with stomach cancer. The trial is categorized as a medical device/tool study.

For healthcare providers and clinical investigators, this registry entry indicates a new supportive care study in the oncology setting. The findings, once published, may inform complementary non-pharmacological interventions for managing cancer treatment side effects. Institutions conducting or reviewing supportive oncology research should note this trial's existence for competitive landscape awareness.

Archived snapshot

Apr 21, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

← ClinicalTrials.gov Studies

The Effect of Stress Ball on Nausea, Anxiety, and Fatigue in Patients With Stomach Cancer

N/A NCT07540169 Kind: NA Apr 20, 2026

Abstract

In this study, we will observe the effects of the Stress Ball.

Conditions: Stomach Cancer, Chemotherapy-induced Nausea and Vomiting, Fatigue

Interventions: A device/tool called a stress ball

View original document →

Get daily alerts for ClinicalTrials.gov Studies

Daily digest delivered to your inbox.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

About this page

What is GovPing?

Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission

What's from the agency?

Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from NIH.

What's AI-generated?

The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.

Last updated

Classification

Agency
NIH
Published
April 20th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Clinical investigators Patients
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers
Activity scope
Clinical trial registration Cancer research
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Public Health Pharmaceuticals

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when ClinicalTrials.gov Studies publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

You're subscribed!