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General Practice clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03375333 Completed - Ultrasound Clinical Trials

How Point-of-Care Ultrasound Affects the Diagnostic Process in General Practice.

Start date: January 15, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study explores how Point of Care Ultrasound (POC-US) is used in general practice in Denmark and how it affects the diagnostic process and treatment of patients. Twenty general practitioners (GPs) will register information each time they use POC-US during a one month period. The information will include indications and frequencies of the performed POC-US examinations, change in tentative diagnosis, plan, and treatment before and after the use of POC-US in relation to confidence in the tentative diagnosis, findings and quality of the POC-US examination. This is an observational study without any intervention.

NCT ID: NCT03135561 Completed - Physical Activity Clinical Trials

A Pedometer-based Intervention With and Without Email Counselling in General Practice

Start date: November 12, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A two-arm parallel randomised controlled trial comparing pedometer-based intervention with and without email counselling in a primary care setting. Physically inactive patients from four general practices will be randomised to the pedometer-plus-email group or to the pedometer-alone group. All patients will be instructed to gradually increase the daily number of steps to at least 10,000. Patients in the pedometer-plus-email group will receive 8 counselling emails based on behavioural techniques. The primary outcome will be change in average daily steps measured during 7-day period at baseline and at 12 weeks.

NCT ID: NCT02275442 Active, not recruiting - Pregnancy Clinical Trials

Effect of Precariousness in RUral Areas During preGNANCY

PRUGNANCY
Start date: September 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The link between precarious situations and health conditions are more described in previous study. Precarious situations are more frequent and complex especially in rural areas. There are recognized like a risk factor of complications during pregnancy and delivery. It's necessary to describe antenatal cares for rural women in precarious situations to prevent those situations, to understand their difficulties in order to reduce inequalities and health spending. The aim of the PRUGNANCY study is to understand the difficulties of rural parturient women and the strategies developed to overcome them. Recognized earlier precarious situations and valorized General Practitioners and restore them to the follow-up or parturient women.