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Compliant Behavior clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05775029 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Complication of Anesthesia

RSI Observation Follow-up

Start date: May 5, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this prospective observational study is to determine if compliance to local guildelines for the RSI procedure, after introduction of a RSI-check list, persists over time (36-60months). Any changes in complication rates will also be evaluated.

NCT ID: NCT05031559 Completed - Impulsive Behavior Clinical Trials

Episodic Future Thinking and Compassion

Start date: March 29, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

During the COVID-19 (Coronavirus Disease 2019) pandemic, public health departments have issued guidelines to limit viral transmission. In this environment, people will feel urges to engage in activities that violate these guidelines, but research on guideline adherence has been reliant on surveys asking people to self-report their typical behaviour, which may fail to capture these urges as they unfold. Guideline adherence could be improved through behaviour change interventions, but considering the wide range of behaviours that COVID-19 guidelines prescribe, there are few methods that allow observing changes of aggregate guideline adherence in the 'wild'. In order to administer interventions and to obtain contemporaneous data on a wide range of behaviours, the researchers use ecological momentary assessment. In this preregistered parallel randomised trial, 95 participants aged 18-65 from the United Kingdom were assigned to three conditions using blinded block randomisation, and engage in episodic future thinking (n = 33), compassion exercises (n = 31), or a sham procedure (n = 31) and report regularly on the intensity of their occurrent urges (min. 1, max. 10) and their ability to control them. The researchers investigate whether state impulsivity and vaccine attitudes predict guideline adherence, while assessing through which mechanism these predictors affect behaviour.

NCT ID: NCT04634019 Active, not recruiting - Morbidity;Infant Clinical Trials

Financially-Incentives to Improve Provider Compliance

Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The main objective of this study is to assess whether making health financing streams conditional on provider performance on knowledge assessment can increase provider compliance with under-5 case management guidelines.

NCT ID: NCT03828526 Recruiting - Compliant Behavior Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of High Fidelity Simulation for Safety in the Medication Process in Intensive Care

Start date: March 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Nursing plays an important role in the medication process in intensive care units. The application of active methodologies guided by the simulation strategy can help in the formation of qualified professionals and in the safer promotion of health care. The objectives to evaluate the effectiveness of the high fidelity simulation applied to nursing students in the process of administering drugs to critical patients in the intensive care setting; evaluate knowledge acquisition, satisfaction and self-confidence after the simulation. This is a prospective, single-blinded, controled clinical trial, with a quantitative approach. The sample will be composed of nursing students who are attending or have completed the discipline of critical care. The students will be randomized electronically to the experimental group, whose intervention will be guided by the high fidelity simulation method and, to the control group, the handling of static dummies / traditional teaching will be adopted as teaching strategy. Both strategies will emphasize the safety process during medication administration to critical patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit and will have an expository class dialogued prior to the intervention. Pre and post-tests will be applied at different times to evaluate the evolution of the level of knowledge and its retention and also, scales of satisfaction and self-confidence in learning. Descriptive and inferential statistics will be performed, as appropriate. It is believed that students submitted to simulation will have the opportunity to better consolidate knowledge during the training process, improve clinical and critical thinking, and decision-making, which will positively influence the safety of critically ill patients of the intensive care unit.

NCT ID: NCT03376152 Active, not recruiting - Pollution; Exposure Clinical Trials

Rural China Electric Kettle Promotion Program

Start date: November 4, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the impact of a pilot Rural Electric Kettle Promotion Program offered to low-income households in rural Anhui Province, China. The primary objective of this study is to determine whether this promotion program causes poverty households currently boiling their drinking water with solid-fuels (or drinking untreated water or bottled water) to switch to boiling their drinking water with electric kettles, and if so, how such a switch might improve safe drinking water access and/or reduce household air pollution.