There are about 5161 clinical studies being (or have been) conducted in Norway. The country of the clinical trial is determined by the location of where the clinical research is being studied. Most studies are often held in multiple locations & countries.
Children with acquired brain injury (ABI) often struggle with complex impairments, including cognitive (such as memory and attention), social, emotional and behavioral challenges. There is broad agreement that there is a lack of evidence-based knowledge about rehabilitation for children with ABI in the chronic phase. The current study is a feasibility study of a planned randomized controlled trial (RCT), the CICI-intervention, directed towards children with ABI and their families in the chronic phase. The feasibility study aims to evaluate the study protocol, the assessment procedures and the technical solutions prior to performing the RCT. A feasibility study with six participating children and families will be conducted in close collaboration with schools and local health care providers. The intervention to be tested (the CICI-intervention) focuses on the child's and family's individually identified target outcome areas to be addressed, with corresponding rehabilitation goals. The intervention aims to enhance everyday functioning in the home and school environment by reducing ABI-related symptoms, and by attaining rehabilitation goals in areas noted as challenging by the participants. In the future RCT-study the efficacy of the CICI-intervention will be measured in terms of goal attainment, community participation, cognitive, behavioral, social, and family functioning.
Aim: To estimate an oral administered recommended minimum efficacy daily dose (MED) of Jarlsberg cheese in order to obtain the needed increased level of Osteocalcin defined as the ratio [Carboxylated / Under Carboxylated] Osteocalcin. Study population: Healthy Voluntary (HV) women between 20 years and pre-menopausal age. Design: Open and randomised two-dimensional single-centre trial with 3-level between-patient Response Surface Pathway (RSP) design in the first dimension and 3-level within-patient RSP design in the secondary dimension.
The background for this project is the growing concern about women's use of medications during pregnancy. Several studies have shown that up to 80% of all pregnant women use at least one medication during pregnancy, most commonly prescription-free medications for pregnancy-related ailments. Despite the frequent use of medications during pregnancy pregnant women tend to overestimate the teratogenic risk of medications - often resulting in unfound anxiety, non-adherence to needed medication, use of herbal "natural" medications, and in the worst case, termination of otherwise wanted pregnancies. Specifically, the investigators have found that ailments such as nausea and vomiting in pregnancy (NVP), often are mismanaged, resulting in profound impacts on the women´s quality of life, but are often being neglected by healthcare personnel. The objective of this project is to investigate whether a pharmacist consultation provided in early pregnancy can result in optimized management of pregnancy-related ailment, a higher quality of life and reduce sick leave among pregnant women. The investigators will capitalize on the existence of a unique personal identification number allocated to every citizen in Norway and link the self-reported data generated in the intervention study to five national health registries. As even mild NVP has been shown to have a huge impact on pregnant women's quality of life, the investigators will specifically focus on preventative measures for NVP. The investigators main hypothesis is: "A pharmacist intervention focusing on safe medication use and in early pregnancy can reduce sick leave days and rates, enhance adherence, promote better management of common pregnancy-related ailments (especially NVP), and improve pregnant women's quality of life" The investigators will include all pregnant women in pregnancy weeks <12. Pregnant women under the age of 18, women who do not understand Norwegian and women for some other reason are unable to sign the consent form will be excluded. Women eligible for inclusion will be allocated to either the intervention group or the control group. Participants in the intervention group will be directed to the nearest study pharmacy for the intervention. The proposed study intervention is to be applied and carried out in the community pharmacy. Approximately 10-15 community pharmacists across the country will be involved. If the distance to a study pharmacy is too far for a physical meeting, the intervention will be performed over the telephone; otherwise, the private information room in the pharmacies will be utilized. All pharmacists involved in the study will be specifically trained to perform the consultation. They will complete several e-learning modules on pharmacotherapy in pregnancy and attend a full-day training work-shop focusing on communication skills led by experienced clinical pharmacists. Data will be collected by four online questionnaires, one at baseline in the first trimester, one during the second trimester, one during the third trimester, and the last one in the post-partum period. Participants in the intervention group will, in addition, complete a satisfaction questionnaire right after the completion of the consultation. All questionnaires will be distributed to the participants by email. Data about the participants will, in addition, be collected from five national registries; National Sick Leave Database (Forløpsdatabasen Trygd), The Norwegian Patient Registry, The Norwegian Prescription Database, The Medical Birth Registry of Norway, and the Municipality Patient and User Registry (Kommunalt Bruker- og Pasientregister). These data will be linked to the self-reported data (by the unique identification number of every citizen in Norway) collected during the intervention study. An economic evaluation will be done to assess the cost-effectiveness of the intervention. All study pharmacists involved in the study will be invited to participate in a qualitative interview to share their experience and opinions regarding the pharmacist intervention. Participants enrolled in the intervention study will be invited to a qualitative interview to share their inputs and opinions on what a mobile application for self-management and an online patient-centered decision support tool for NVP should include.
Neonatal jaundice is a common and most often harmless condition. However, when unrecognized it can be fatal or cause serious brain injury. Three quarters of these deaths are estimated to occur in the poorest regions of the world. The treatment of jaundice, phototherapy, is in most cases easy, low-cost and harmless. The crucial point in reducing the burden of disease is therefore to identify then children at risk. This results in the need for low-cost, reliable and easy-to-use diagnostic tools that can identify newborns with jaundice. Based on previous research on the bio-optics of jaundiced newborn skin, a prototype of a smartphone application was developed and tested in a pilot study and the application refined. This smartphone application will now be evaluated in a clinical trial set in two hospitals in Norway. The smartphone application gives immediate estimates of bilirubin values in newborns, and these estimates will be compared to the bilirubin levels measured in standard blood samples, as well as the results from ordinary transcutaneous measurement devices.
The purpose of this trial is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of subcutaneous secukinumab 300 mg compared to placebo, in combination with standard of care therapy (SoC), in subjects with active lupus nephritis (ISN/RPS Class III or IV, with or without co-existing class V features).
The study aims to describe physical activity (PA) levels in young people with haemophilia A in Norway compared with non-haemophilia controls, and to identify factors influencing PA. This will be conducted through an observational study measuring PA over 12 weeks. Forty young people with moderate and severe haemophilia A will be enrolled. PA data will be compared to demographically and seasonally matched non-haemophilia controls. PA will be measured using the activity tracker Fitbit Charge 3. A subgroup of participants will also wear the hip-worn accelerometer ActiGraph GTX+BT for seven consecutive days in order to validate the two devices against each other.
This study evaluates the benefits and harms of goal directed fluid removal with furosemide versus placebo in critical ill adult patients with fluid overload in the intensive care unit. Half of the patients will receive furosemide and the other half placebo. The treatment will continue until the excess fluid is excreted.
The investigators aim to test the effectiveness of Individual Placement and Support (IPS) on 1. employment, 2. welfare dependency, and 3. public-sector health care utilization. This is a naturalistic controlled trial, where one municipality (Bodø in Norway) with about 50000 inhabitants get access to IPS services in public sector mental health services during the period 2013-2016. The target group for the intervention is patients with severe mental illness (SMI) in the age group 18-40 at time of treatment. Patients already receiving lifelong disability benefits will be excluded. The control group will be an average of 10 municipalities in Norway without IPS services. Data for outcomes will be based on public registries available for research.
Previous studies have shown that health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in adolescents living with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS/ME) is low if compared with healthy adolescents and adolescents living with other chronic diseases. Effective strategies to improve HRQoL in this group are still lacking. Recently we have observed HRQoL in a group of Norwegian adolescents with CFS/ME (not yet published), which is the background for a new study where we have planned an intervention with health promoting dialogues between patient and nurse, as a strategy to improve HRQoL. In this study we have also opened to include adolescents with other chronic fatigue diagnosis with similar challenges in follow-up as in CFS/ME.
The aim of the project is to develop and evaluate an app-based intervention for adolescents who have been exposed to cyberbullying. The overarching goal is to offer a low-threshold intervention, called NettOpp, that is easy accessible and free to use for every junior high school student who has experienced cyberbullying in Norway.