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Clinical Alarms clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06089239 Not yet recruiting - Patient Safety Clinical Trials

De-Implementing Fall Prevention Alarms in Hospitals

Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a Hybrid II de-implementation study to reduce use of fall prevention alarms in hospitals. The intervention consists of tailored, site-specific approaches for three core implementation strategies: education, audit/feedback and opinion leaders. Hospital units will be randomized to low-intensity or high-intensity coaching for the implementation of the tailored strategies.

NCT ID: NCT03347149 Completed - Clinical Alarms Clinical Trials

Outcomes and User Acceptance of the IntelliVue Alarm Advisor Software (USA)

Start date: August 28, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This Clinical Study will be conducted as a comparative study focusing on usability and efficiency by comparing alarm burden pre- and post- implementation of an "Alarm Advisor software".

NCT ID: NCT03182452 Completed - Clinical Alarms Clinical Trials

Outcomes and User Acceptance of the IntelliVue Alarm Advisor Software (Europe)

Start date: May 15, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This Clinical Study will be conducted as a comparative study focusing on usability and efficiency by comparing alarm burden pre- and post-implementation of an "Alarm Advisor software".

NCT ID: NCT02319421 Completed - Clinical Alarms Clinical Trials

Reducing the Risk of Alarm Fatigue Through the Use of Focused Management in Safety Huddles

Start date: March 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Context: Alarm fatigue is a threat to hospital patient safety. National surveys reveal that high alarm rates interrupt patient care, reduce trust in alarms, and lead clinicians to disable alarms entirely. Safety huddles offer an appropriate forum for reviewing alarm data and identifying patients whose high alarm rates may necessitate safe tailoring of alarm limits. Objectives: To evaluate the impact of a focused physiologic monitor alarm reduction intervention integrated into safety huddles that involves discussing safe monitor parameter adjustments on the physiologic monitor alarm rates of individual patients with high alarm rates who meet "low acuity" criteria. Study Design: A prospective, quasi-experimental pilot study of the impact of the huddle intervention on the alarm rates of low acuity high alarm rate individual patients discussed in huddles in the PICU. The huddle intervention will consist of a script to facilitate the discussion of the alarm data. Setting/Participants: Participants will include all low acuity patients and their providers in the PICU at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Study Interventions and Measures: The primary outcome is the rate of crisis and warning alarms per patient day for intervention cases as compared with others in the high alarm / low acuity cohort. Safety measures will include unexpected changes in patient acuity or code blue events within one week of monitor change or discharge.