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Satisfaction, Consumer clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Satisfaction, Consumer.

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NCT ID: NCT05855837 Completed - Clinical trials for Satisfaction, Consumer

Appetite Responses to Cereal Products

Start date: June 5, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this clinical trial is to investigate appetite responses to 2 cereal products in healthy adults.

NCT ID: NCT03595449 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Lidocaine Jelly for Pain Control During Mohs Surgery

Start date: August 13, 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Does the use of lidocaine jelly during Mohs surgery on the nose decrease the total amount of lidocaine used during surgery. Does patient satisfaction improve when lidocaine jelly is used during Mohs surgery of the nose?

NCT ID: NCT03545698 Completed - Caregiver Stress Clinical Trials

Enhancing and Scaling a High-Touch Home-based Primary Care Program

Start date: June 26, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall goal of the West Health Institute-Northwell PRP is to identify a clinical and economic model that can support scaling the Northwell House Calls program within a four year implementation period, while maintaining the same level of quality, patient/caregiver satisfaction, and "high touch" provider-patient communication that the program is known for. The Clinical Trial portion of this study refers to the secondary endpoint listed below.

NCT ID: NCT03461640 Completed - Labor Pain Clinical Trials

Community Based Doulas for Migrant Women in Labour and Birth in Sweden - a Randomised Controlled Trial

Start date: March 10, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

One initiative to address communication problems between migrant women not fluent in Swedish and caregivers throughout childbirth is to provide language assistance, cultural interpretation and labour support to the woman through Community Based Doulas (CBDs). CBDs are bilingual women from migrant communities trained by midwives to provide cultural, language and labour support to migrant women throughout their labour and birth. The study will evaluate the effectiveness of community-based doula support for improving the intrapartum care experiences and postnatal wellbeing of Somali-, Tigrinya -, Arabic- and Russian-speaking migrant women giving birth in Stockholm, Sweden. The randomisation ratio will be 1:1; CBD support in addition to standard intrapartum care or standard intrapartum care. Women allocated to receive CBD support in addition to standard intrapartum care (intervention group), will be contacted by a Somali, Arabic-, Russian- or Tigrinya-speaking CBD as appropriate, and arrangements will be made for the doula and the women to meet twice prior to the birth to get to know each other and discuss the woman's wishes regarding support in labour and what the CBD can offer. Each woman will then contact her CBD when she goes into labour and the CBD will attend hospital with her and stay with her throughout labour and birth, in addition to any other support people she may have, such as her partner. Women allocated to the comparison arm of the trial will receive standard intrapartum care as provided at their chosen hospital of birth. The hypothesis is that women randomised to receive CBD support in labour will rate their care for labour and birth more highly and have better emotional wellbeing (lower mean scores on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale) two months after birth than women allocated to standard care.